Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF GIFT TAX, MADRAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
N. S. GETTY CHETTIAR
DATE OF JUDGMENT16/09/1971
BENCH:
HEGDE, K.S.
BENCH:
HEGDE, K.S.
GROVER, A.N.
CITATION:
1971 AIR 2410 1972 SCR (1) 736
ACT:
Gift Tax Act, 1958-Section 2(xii) and 2(xxiv)--Coparcener
taking lesser share and allotting greater share to other
members-If makes "gift"-Partition, if "transfer of
property".
HEADNOTE:
In a partition of the properties of a joint Hindu Undivided
Family a coparcener took as his share less than what he was
entitled to and allotted greater share to the other members
of the coparcenery. On the question whether the coparcener
could be held to have made a "gift" of a portion of his
share of the property to the other members and was liable to
tax under the Gift Tax Act, 1958.
HELD:(i) A coparcener in a Hindu Undivided Family has
no definite share in the family property. His share gets
determined only when there is a division of status or a
division by metes and bounds. It is not necessary that in
every case of partition in a Hindu Undivided Family there
should first be a division in status and thereafter a
division by metes and bounds. In the present case there is
no material to show that there was any division of status
before the properties were actually divided. Therefore, it
is not necessary to consider what would be the position in
law if there was just a division of status and the same was
followed by a division by metes and bounds. [738 H-739E]
(ii)The partition of the joint Hindu Family property is not
a transfer
Commissioner of Income-tax, Gujarat v. Keshavlal Lallubhai
Patel, 55 I.T.R. 637, followed.
(iii)A partition is not a "disposition" "conveyance"
"assignment" "settlement" "delivery" "payment" "or other
alienation of property" within the meaning of those words s.
2(xxiv) of the Act. These words are used as some of the
modes of transfer of property and have to be understood in
the setting in which those terms are used and the purpose
they are intended to serve. [742-G]
It cannot be considered a "transaction entered into by any
person with intent thereby to diminish directly or
indirectly the value of his own property and to increase the
value of the property of any other person" within the
meaning of cl. (d) of s. 2(xxiv), because, a member of a
Hindu Undivided Family who has no definite share in the
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family property before division cannot be said to diminish
directly or indirectly the value of his own property and to
increase the value of the property of another person.
Further, the transaction referred to in cl. (d) of s.
2(xxiv) takes its colour from the main clause i.e., it must
be transfer of property in some way. [742 H-743 C]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos. 128 of
1968 and 1341 of 1971.
Appeals by certificate/special leave from the judgment and
order dated December 10, 1965 of the Madras High Court in
Tax Case No. 65 of 1967 (Reference No. 18 of 1963).
737
Jagadish Swarup, Solicitor-General, A. N. Kirpal, R. N.
Sachthey and B. D. Sharma, for the appellant (in both the
appeals).
Uttama Reddy and D. N. Gupta, for the respondent (in both
the appeals).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Hegde, J. Both these appeals by the Commissioner of Gift Tax
arise from the same judgment. The former one is by certi-
ficate and the latter by special leave. Civil Appeal No.
1341 ,of 1971 came to be filed because the certificate given
by the High Court not being supported by any reason, the
appeal brought on the strength of that certificate (Civil
Appeal No. 128 of 1969) became unsustainable. That is why
instead of one appeal, there are two appeals before us in
respect of the same decision.
The decision appealed against was rendered by the High Court
of Madras in its advisory jurisdiction, in a reference under
s. 26(1) of the Gift Tax Act, 1958 (to be hereinafter
referred to as the Act). The Income ’Tax Appellate
Tribunal, Madras Bench referred the question a,
"Whether there was gift by N. S. Getti Chettiar of Rs.
2,46,377 on which he is liable to pay gift tax"
to the High Court seeking its opinion. The High Court
answered that question in the negative. The Commissioner of
Gift Tax not being satisfied with that decision has brought
these appeals.
The facts of the case are not many though the question of
law arising for decision is by no means easy. The
respondent, N. S. Getti Chettiar (who will hereinafter be
referred to as the assessee) was karta of his undivided
Hindu family consisting of himself, his son Govindaraju
Chettiar and six sons of the asid Govindaraju Chettiar.
There was a partition of the immovable properties of the
family through a registered deed executed on January 17,
1958 and the movable properties were divided on April 13,
1958 on which date the necessary entries in the account
books were made. The assessee claimed recognition of that
partition under s. 25A of the Act. That was granted by the
Department on November 29, 1958. The total value of the
properties so divided was Rs. 8,51,440/- but under that
partition the assessee took properties worth only Rs.
1,78,343/-. The remaining properties were allotted to his
son and grandsons.
The Gift Tax Officer overruling the objection of the
assessee, came to the conclusion that the assessee by
allotting greater share to the other members of the
coparcenary than to which
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they were entitled, must be held to have made a ’gift’ of a
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portion of his share of the property to the other members
and hence was liable to be taxed under the Act. He, opined
that the partition in question is a transaction entered into
between the assessee and the members of his family with
intent thereby to diminish the value of assessee’s own
property and increase the value of the property of his son
and grandsons.
Aggrieved by that order, the assessee went up in appeal to
the Appellate Assistant Commissioner. The Appellate
Assistant Commissioner held that as no member of an
undivided Hindu Family had a definite share in the family
assets, on partition, when the joint enjoyment came to an
end, there was no need to have arithmetical equality between
the shares of the various coparceners. He accordingly held
that the assessee was not liable to pay any gift tax in
respect of the properties that fell to the shares of his son
and grandsons. The Department appealed against this
decision to the Tribunal. It was contended before the
Tribunal ’that the transaction in question came within s. 2
(xii) and s. (xxiv), in particular it came within cl. (d) of
s. 2 (xxiv), as property included any interest in property
and partition constituted a transaction; the assessee had,
by relinquishing a portion of what was his due, transferred
such interest and properties in favour of the other members
of the family for no consideration and consequently the Gift
Tax was properly leviable. This contention was not accepted
by the Tribunal. It held that the interest that the
assessee had in his Hindu Undivided Family property was not
definable, and therefore s. 2(xxiv) was not attracted to the
facts of the case.
The High Court agreed with the conclusions reached by the
Assistant Appellate Commissioner and the Tribunal. It came
to the conclusion that the partition in the family of the
assessee did not come within the mischief either of s.
2(xii) or s. 2(xxiv). It also opined that under the
partition, there was no deemed ’gift’ as contemplated by s.
4 of the Act.
Mr. Solicitor-General appearing for the Commissioner of Gift
Tax did not place any reliance before us on s. 4 of the Act.
Therefore we need not consider the scope of s. 4 of the Act.
All that Mr. Solicitor General contended was that the case
came either under s. 2(xii) or under s. 2(xxiv). He built
up his arguments thus
A partition in a H.U.F. invariably involves two steps, first
there is a division of status and thereafter there is a
division by metes and bounds. A coparcener’s share is fixed
according to law as soon as there is a division of status.
Therefore, if at the time of division by metes and bounds he
chooses to take a share
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less than to which he is entitled to under law, then the
same: would amount to a ’gift’ of the balance of property to
which he was entitled, to the other coparceners. We are
unable to agree with Mr. Solicitor General that in every
case of partition in a H.U.F. there’ should first be a
division of a status and thereafter a division by metes and
bounds. There are innumerable cases where a partition takes
place without there being earlier any division of status.
Coming to the facts of the case, there is no, material
before us to show that there was any division of status
before the properties were actually divided. The Tribunal
has, not found that there was any division of status amongst
the members of the family before they divided the
properties. The partition deed is not before us nor are the
account books showing the division of the movable properties
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is before us. It is not known whether under the registered
partition deed, there was only a partial partition or a
complete disruption of the family. That being so, we have
to proceed on the basis of the facts found by the Tribunal
and apply the law to the facts so found. The argument that
there was first a division of status and the same was
followed up by a division by metes and bounds does not
appear to have been urged before the Tribunal. Under these
circumstances, it is not necessary for us to consider what
would be the position in law if there was first a division
of status in a H.U.F. and the same was followed up by
division by metes and bounds in which division one of the
coparceners takes properties, less than to what he is
entitled to under law.
Before proceeding to examine the relevant provisions of the
Act, it is necessary to mention that according to the true
notion of an undivided Hindu family, no individual member of
that family, whilst it remains undivided, can predicate of
the joint and undivided property, that he, that particular
member, has a certain definite share namely a third or a
fourth. All the coparceners in a Hindu joint family are the
joint owners of the properties of the family. So long as
the family remains joint, no coparcener can predicate what
his share in the joint family is. His share gets determined
only when there is a division of status or a division by
metes and bounds. Therefore it is not correct to assume
that a coparcener in Hindu joint family has any definite
share in the family property, before its division. Having
stated that much, let us now proceed to consider the
relevant provisions of the Act.
Section 3 of the Act is the charging section. It says:
"Subject to the other provisions contained in
this Act, there shall be charged for every
assessment year commencing on and from the 1st
day of April 1958, a
740
tax (hereinafter referred to as gift-tax) in
respect of the gifts, if any, made by a person
during the previous year (other than gifts
made before the 1st day of April 1957) at the
rate or rates specified in the schedule."
’Gift’ is defined in S. 2(xii). That sub-
clause says:
" "gift" means the transfer by one person to
another of any existing movable or immovable
property made voluntarily and without
consideration in money or money’s worth, and
includes the transfer of any property deemed
to be a gift under section 4."
The expression ’transfer of property’ is
defined in S. 2(xxiv) That provision reads :
" "transfer of property" means any
disposition, conveyance, assignment,
settlement, delivery, payment or other
alienation of property and,’ without limiting
the generality of the foregoing, includes-
(a) the creation of a trust in property;
b) the grant or creation of any lease,
mortgage, charge, easement, licence, power,
partnership or interest in property;
(c) the exercise of a power of appointment
of property vested in any person, not the
owner of the property, to determine its
disposition in favour of any person other than
donee of the power; and
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(d) any transaction entered into by any
person with intent thereby to diminish
directly or indirectly the value of his own
property and to increase the value of the
property of any other person.’
We shall first examine whether the partition with which we
are concerned in these appeals can be considered as transfer
of property under the general law. Thereafter we shall
proceed to consider whether it comes within the extended
meaning given to that expression in s. 2(xxiv).
It is now settled by the decision of this Court in Commis-
sioner of Income-tax, Gujarat v. Keshavlal Lallubhai
Patel(1) that a partition of joint Hindu family property
cannot be considered as transfer in the strict sense-the
sense in which all legal expressions are understood and more
particularly in tax
(1) 55 I.T.R. 637.
741
laws. In the course of that judgment Sikri, J. (as he then
was) speaking for the Court observed :
"But, is a partition of joint Hindu family
property a transfer in the strict sense? We
are of the opinion that it is not. This was
so held in Gutta Radhakrishnavya v. Gutta
Sarasamma(1). Subba Rao, J., (then a judge of
the Madras High Court) after examining several
authorities came to the conclusion that "
partition is really a process in and by which
a joint enjoyment is transformed into an
enjoyment in severalty. Each one of the
shares had an antecedent title and, therefore,
no conveyance is involved in the process, as a
conferment of a new title is not necessary."
The Madras High Court again examined the
question in M. K. Stremann v. Commissioner of
Income-tax (2) with reference to section
16(3)(a)(iv). It observed that "obviously no
question of transfer of assets can, arise when
all that happens is separation in status,
though the result of such severance in status
is that the property hitherto held by the
coparcenary is held thereafter by the
separated members as tenants-incommon.
Subsequent partition between the divided
members of the family does not amount either
to a transfer of assets from that body of the
tenants-incommon to each of such tenants-in-
common."
The Punjab High Court came to the same conclu-
sion in Jagan Nath v. State of Punjab(3).
Agreeing with these authorities, we hold that
when the joint Hindu family property was
partitioned, there was no transfer of assets
within section 16(3)(a)(iii) and (iv) to the
wife or the minor son."
We are bound by the ratio of that decision and if we may say
so, we respectfully agree with the statement of the law
quoted above. Hence we hold that the partition in the
family of the assessee did not effect any transfer as
generally understood in law.
This takes us to to s. 2 (xxiv). The opening words of the
provision refer to ’transfer of property’. That clause
enumerates several types of transfers and not to any other
transactions. It is also necessary to attach significance
to the words "or other alienation of property" immediately
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after setting out the various
(1) I.L.R. 1951 Mad. 607. (2) (1961) 41 I.T.R. 297.
(3) (1962) 64 P.L.R. 22.
742
types of transfers. ’If we read the clause as a whole, it
is clear that it deals with transfer of properties in
various ways.
As observed in Craies on Statute Law (6th Edn. p. 213) that
an interpretation clause which extends the meaning of a word
does not take away its ordinary meaning. An interpretation
clause is not meant to prevent the word receiving its
ordinary, popular and natural sense whenever that would be
properly applicable, but to enable the word as used in the
Act, when there is nothing in the context or the subject
matter to the contrary to be applied to some things to which
it would not ordinary be applicable.
Bearing in mind these principles, let us now examine the
scope of s. 2(xxiv). That provision speaks of
"disposition", " conveyance", "assignment", "settlement",
"delivery", " payment" or "other alienation of property".
A reading of this section clearly goes to show that the
words "disposition", "conveyance", "assignment",
"settlement", "delivery" and "payment" are used as some of
the modes of transfer ,of property. The dictionary gives
various meanings for those words but those meanings do not
help us. We have to understand the meaning of those words
in the context in which they are used. Words in a section
of a statute are not to be interpreted by having those words
in one hand and the dictionary in the other. In spelling
out the meaning of the words in a section, one must take
into consideration the setting in which those terms .are
used and the purpose that they are intended to serve. If so
understood, it is clear that the word "disposition" in the
context means giving away or giving up by a person of
something which was his own, "conveyance" means transfer of
ownership, "assignment" means the transfer of the claim,
right or property to another, "settlement" means settling
the property, right or claim conveyance or disposition of
property for the benefit of another, "delivery" contemplated
therein is the delivery of one’s property to another for no
consideration and "payment" implies gift of money by someone
to another. We do not think that a partition in a H.U.F.
can be considered either as "disposition" or "conveyance" or
"assignment" or "settlement" or "delivery" or "payment" or
"alienation" within the meaning of those words in s. 2
(xxiv).
This leaves us with cl. (d) of S. 2 (xxiv) which speaks of a
transaction entered into by any person with intent thereby
to diminish directly or indirectly the value of his own
property and to increase the value of the property of
another person. A member of H.U.F. who, as mentioned
earlier, has no definite share in the family property before
division, cannot be said to diminish
743
directly or indirectly the value of his property or to
increase the value of the property of any other coparcener
by agreeing to take a share lesser than what he would have
got if he had gone to court to enforce his claim. Till
partition, his share in the family property is
indeterminate. He becomes entitled to a share in the family
property only after the partition. Therefore there is no
question of his either diminishing directly or indirectly
the value of his own property or of increasing the value of
the property of anyone else. The "transaction" referred to
in cl. (d) of s. 2 (xxiv) takes its colour from the main
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clause viz., it must be a transfer of property in some way.
This conclusion of ours gets support from sub-clause (a) to
(c) of clause (xxiv) of s. 2, each of which deals with one
or the other mode of transfer. If the parliament intended
to bring within the scope of that provision partitions of
the type with which we are concerned, nothing was easier
than to say 2. In interpreting tax laws, courts merely look
at the works of the section. If a case clearly comes within
the section, the subject is taxed and not otherwise.
For these reasons, we agree with the view taken by the High
Court of Madras,, the’ Tribunal and the Assistant Appellate
Commissioner that the assessee made no "gift" under the
partition deed in question.
In the result these appeals fail. Civil Appeal No. 1341 of
1971 is dismissed on merits and Civil Appeal No. 128 of 1969
is dismissed as being not maintainable. The assessee is
entitled to his costs-Fee one set.
K.B.N. Appeals
dismissed.
744