Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 10
PETITIONER:
BALAJI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
INCOME-TAX OFFICER, SPECIAL INVESTIGATION CIRCLE
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
04/08/1961
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
SHAH, J.C.
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
CITATION:
1962 AIR 123 1962 SCR (2) 983
CITATOR INFO :
R 1962 SC1406 (27)
F 1962 SC1563 (10)
F 1962 SC1621 (45,165)
R 1965 SC 342 (25)
R 1965 SC1375 (13,35,40)
R 1965 SC1862 (10)
RF 1967 SC 517 (2)
R 1971 SC 792 (4)
RF 1972 SC 425 (25)
RF 1973 SC1056 (3)
R 1984 SC 420 (45)
ACT:
Income Tax-Computation of total income of individual-
Inclusion of income of wife and minor children from partner-
ship--Constitutional validity of enactment-Indian Income-tax
Act, 1922 (11 of 1922), s. (16) (3) (a) (i) and(ii)-
Constitution of India, Arts. 14, 19 (1) If) & (g).
HEADNOTE:
The petitioner and his wife started business in partnership
and admitted their three minor sons to it, in computing the
total income of the petitioner for the purpose of assessment
984
the Income-tax Officer included the share of the income of
the wife and three minor sons unders 16(3)(a) (i) and (ii)
of the Indian Income Tax Act, 1922. The petitioner moved
the Supreme Court under Art. 32 of the Constitution
challenging the constitutionality the said provisions on the
grounds, (1) that they were ultra vires the Legislature
under Entry 54 of the Federal Legislative List of the
Government of India Act, 19351,and (2) that they contravened
the provisions of Arts. 14 and 19 (1) (f) and (g) of the
Constitution,
Held, that the Entries in the Legislative Lists are not
powers but fields of legislation and the widest import and
significance should be attached to them. Thus interpreted,
there could be no doubt that Entry 54 of the Federal Legis-
lative List must cover such legislation as the impugned
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 10
provision intended to prevent the evasion of tax.
Sardar Baldev Singh v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Delhi and
Ajmer. (1961) 1 S.C.R. 482, referred to.
The two tests of permissible classification tinder Art. 14
of the Constitution, as held by this Court, were (1) that
the classification must be founded on an intelligent
differentia and (2) that the differentia must be reasonably
connected with the object of the legislation.
So judged, it could not be said that the differentia on
which the ’impugned provision founded its, classification
had no rational relation to its object, namely, the
prevention of the evasion of tax. The impugned provision
did not therefore, violate Art. 14 of the Constitution.
It was not appropriate to apply American decisions dealing
with evasion of taxes to similar cases in India where the
conditions were entirely different,Since the Legislature
cognisant of the widespread evasion of taxes in this
country, enacted the law for its prevention, it would not be
proper for this court, in the absence of counterbalancing
circumstances, to hold on the analogy of American decisions
that there was no need for such legislation.
Albert A. Hoeper v. Tax Commissioner of Wisconsin (1931) 76
L. Ed. 248, distinguished and held inapplicable.
B. M. Amina Umma v. Income-tax Officer, Kozhikode, (1954)
26 I.T.R. 137, approved.
Nor did the impugned provision violate Art. 19(1) (f) and
(g) of the constitution.
A tax authorised by law may be questioned as offending the
fundamental freedom under Art. 19 of the Constitution.
985
A tax law, like any other law, must also satisfy that (i)
the appropriate legislature was competent to enact it and
(ii) that it did not infringe any of the fundamental rights.
Md. Yasin v. The Town Area Committee,, Jalalabad, (1952)
S.C.R. 572, Himmattai Harilal Mehta v. State Of Madhya
Pradesh, (1934) S.C.R. 1122, K. K. Kochuni v. State of
Madras, (1960) 3 S.C.R. 887 and K. T. Moopil Nair v. State
of Kerala, (1961) 3 S.C.R. 77, referred to.
Even so, the restriction imposed by the impugned provision
must be held to be reasonable. Although the mode of
taxation it provided might be a little hard on a husband or
a father in the case of genuine partnerships, that was
sufficiently offset by the resulting benefit to the public
as also by the fact that the additional payment of tax made
by the husband or the father on the income of the wife or
minor children would ultimately be borne by them in the
final accounting between them.
State of Madras v. V. G. Row., (1952) S.C.R. 597, referred
to.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Petition No. 240 of 1960.
Petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution of India for the
enforcement of Fundamental Richts.
T. M. Thakar, S. N. Andley and Rameshwar Nath, for the
petitioner.
H. N. Sanyal, Additional Solicitor-General of India, K. N.
Rajagopal Sastri and P. D. Menon, for the respondents.
1961. August 4. Judgment of the Court has delivered by
SUBBA RAO, J.This writ petition filed under Art. 32 of
the Constitution raises the question of’ the constitutional
validity of: S. 16(3)(a)(i) of the Indian Income-tax Act,
1922 (Act XI of 1922), (hereinafter called the Act).
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 10
The facts are not in dispute and may be briefly narrated.
The petitioner., Balaji, his six soils
986
and his wife, by name Godawaribai, constituted a Joint Hindu
family. The family was a trading family and it had, besides
business in money lending, considerable agricultural lands.
On November 23, 1946, two of his sons became divided from
the family. In the year 1951, through the intervention of
mediators the other members of the family were also divided
and another major member started a separate business on his
own. Thereafter, the petitioner and his wife formed
themselves into a partnership to carry on their business and
admitted their three minor sons to the benefits thereof On
September 22, 1952, a partnership deed was executed giving
an equal share to each of the partners. On the basis of the
partnership deed, in respect of the assessment year 1952-53
the petitioner filed two applications before the Income-tax
Officer, Wardha, one under s. 25-A of the Act for
recognizing the partition, and the other under s. 26-A for
registration of the firm. Both the applications were
finally ordered by the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal,
Bombay, by its order dated September 3, 1958, that is, the
parti. tion was recognized and the firm was granted
registration. For the assessment years 1953-54 and 1954-55
also, the Income-tax Department registered the firm under s.
26-A of the Act. The assessment proceedings in respect of
the said three years are pending before the concerned
Income-tax authorities. For the assessment year 1955-56
also, the Income-tax Officer allowed the registration of the
firm, but determined the total income of the petitioner at
Rs. 2,44,625 as against the total income returned by him at
Rs. 58,232. The disparity arose because, while the assessee
excluded from his total income the income of the partnership
falling to the shares of his wife and three minor sons, the
Income-tax Officer included the share income of his wife and
three minor sons in ’the said bussiness in the total income
of the petitioner, The petitioner, by the present petition,
987
challenges the constitutional validity of s.16(3)(a) (i) and
(ii) of the Act, and prays for a declaration that the said
provisions are ultra vires the Constitution and for the
issue of a writ of certiorari quashing the assessment order
dated March 15, 1960, and for the issue of a writ of
prohibition restraining the respondents from including the
share income, of his wife and minor children from the
partnership firm in his total income and taxing the same in
his hands.
The first question raised is whether the appropriate
Legislature had the competence to enact s. 16(3)(a)(i) and
(ii) of the Act. It would be convenient at the outset to
read the relevant part of the said section.
Section 16. (3) In computing the total income of any
individual for the purpose of assessment, there shall be
included-
(a)so much of the income of a wife, or a minor child
of such individual as arises directlyor
indirectly-
(i) from the membership of the wife in a firm
of which her husband is a partner ;
(ii)from the admission of the minor to the
benefits of partnership in a firm of which
such in-dividual is a partner.
Section 16 provides for the computation of’ total income of
a person and describes what sums are to be included and what
sums are to be excluded therefrom. Under sub-cls. (i) and
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 10
(ii) of el. (a) of sub-s.. (3) of the said section, the
shares in the profits of the firm received by the wife and
the minor children shall,be included in the total income of
the individual. Under the said sub-clauses an individual is
made, liable to pay tax in respect of the income of’ his
wife and minor children,
988
though the said liability is confined to the circum,stances
mentioned therein.
Learned counsel for the petitioner contended that Entry 54
in the Federal Legislative List of the Government of India
Act, 1935, did not confer on the Legislature any power to
tax A on the income of B and, therefore, the sub-section was
ultra vires the Legislature. Entry 54 of the Federal
Legislative List ran : "Taxes on income, other than
agricultural income". The said Entry is identical with item
82 of List I of’ the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution.
The argument is that income-tax is a tax imposed upon a
person in relation to his income and, therefore, A can only
be taxed on his income and not oil the income of B Learned
counsel for the respondents, oil the other hand, would
contend that the express terms of the Entry did not restrict
the legislative power to tax only the income of the person
assessed, that what could be taxed under that Entry was "in-
come" and, therefore, nothing prevented the legislature from
imposing the incidence of the tax Oil a person other than
the person whose income was to be assessed. Alternatively,
he would make. a distinction between the taxability of the
income and the machinery for its collection and contend that
though the income of the wife and the minor sons was
only’taxable, there was nothing illegal in imposing the
immediate incidence on the father, as there was sufficient
intimate nexus between the individual, his wife and minor
sons, doing business in partnership, leaving the ultimate
liability inter se to be settled between themselves. This
question was directly raised in B. M.. Amina Umma v. Income-
tax Officer, Kozhikode (1) and was answered in favour of the
Income-tax Department. The same question was posed before
this Court in Sardar Baldev Singh v. Commissioner of Income
Tax, Delhi and Ajmer (2 ) and was left
(1) (1954) 26 I.T.R. 137.
(2) (1961) 1 S.C.R. 482, 493.
989
open. A final decision by this Court oil such an important
question at the earliest point of time is highly desirable,
but, with some reluctance are leaving open this question
once again, as the petition call be satisfactorily disposed
of on a narrower basis.
It is well settled that the Entries in the Lists are not
powers but are only fields of legislation, and that widest
import and significance must be given to the, language used
by Parliament in the various Entries. Sarkar, J., speaking
for this Court, observed in Sardar Baldev Singh’s Case thus
:
" So entry 54 should be read not only as
authorising the imposition of a tax but also
as authorising all enactment which prevents
the tax imposed being evaded. If it were not
to be so read, their the admitted power to tax
a person on his own income might often be made
infructuous by ingenious contrivances."
This decision holds that the said Entry can sustain a law
made to prevent the evasion of tax.
The short question, therefore, is whether s.16 (3)(a)(1) and
(ii) is a provision made by the Legislature to prevent
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 10
evasion of tax. Under the relevant provision of the Income-
tax Act, if a firm its registered, the share of each partner
in the profit of the firm would be added to his other income
and changed as part of his total income. After 1956, the
position is the same except in one regard with which we are
not now concerned. This provision ",as intended for the.
benefit of partners of a business, for it made them liable
only to pay tax on their own income. But it gave an
effective handle to evade, taxation in another direction. A
husband or a father could nominally take his wife or his
minor SODS in partnership with him so that tax burden
(1) (1961) 1 S.C.R. 482, 493.
990
might be lightened, for, if the income was divided between a
number of people, the income derived by an individual
therefrom might fall under the limits of taxable income or
under a less onerous slab. This device enables an assessee
to secure the entire income of the business but at the same
time to evade income-tax which he would have otherwise been
liable to pay. The Income-tax Enquiry Commission of 1936
made certain recommendation to prevent evasion of tax in
such cases. The Legislature accepted those recommendations
and the loopholes were sought to be plugged by enacting the
said sub-section. Sub-section (3)(a)(1) and (ii) was
therefore enacted for preventing evasion of tax and was well
within the competence of the Federal Legislature.
The constitutional validity of the said provision was next
questioned on the ground that it violated the doctrine of
equality before the law enshrined in Art. 14 of the
Constitution. Under Art. 14, "The State shall not deny to
any person equality before the law or the equal protection
of the laws within the territory of India." But decisions of
this Court permitted classification if there was reasonable
basis for the differentiation. It was held that what Art.
14 prohibited was class legislation and not reasonable
classification for the purpose of legislation. Two
conditions were laid down for passing the test of
permissible classification, namely,(i) the classification
must be founded on an intelligible differentia which
distinguishes persons or things that are grouped together
from others left out of the group, and (ii) that the
differentia must have rational relation to the object sought
to be achieved by the statute in question. Under the
impugned sub-section, an individual is taxed on the income
of his wife or his minor children., if he carries on
business in partnership with his wife or if he admits his
minor sons to the benefits of the partnership, whereas an
individual, if he carries on business in: partnership
991
with a third party, whether a man or a woman, or even with
his major children, or if he and his or children carry on
business separately, will be liable only to pay tax on his
share of the partnership income, that is, for the purpose
of’ this subsection, the former is put in a category
different from the latter. It cannot be said that there is
no differentia between the two groups; but what is contended
is that the said differentia has no rational relation to the
object sought to be achieved by the statute in question. It
was asked how, from the standpoint of imposition of tax, the
difference between an individual and his wife doing business
in partnership, and between an individual and his wife doing
business separately and an individual doing business hi
partnership with his wife and an individual doing business
in partnership with a third party, male or female, and
between an individual who has admitted his minor children to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 10
the partnership business and an individual who is doing
business in partnership with his major children or
outsiders, would have any reasonable basis. This argument
ignores the object of the legislation. We have held that
the object of the legislation was to prevent evasion of tax.
A similar device would not ordinarily be resorted to by
individuals by entering into partnership with persons other
than those mentioned in the sub-section, as it would involve
a risk of the third-party turning round and asserting his
own rights. The Legislature, therefore, selected for the
purpose of classification only that group of persons who in
fact are used as a cloak to perpetrate fraud on taxation.
It was then said that there might be genuine partnerships
between an individual and his wife and, therefore, there is
no reasonable relation between the classification and the
object sought to be achieved, at any rate to the extent of
those, genuine cases. But there is no classification
between genuine and non-genuine cases: the classi-
992
fication is between cases of partnership between husband,
wife and/or minor children, whether genuine or not, and
partnerships between others. In demarcating a group, the
net was cast a little wider, but it was necessary, as any
further subclassification as genuine and Don-genuine
partnerships might defeat the purpose of the Act.
Strong reliance is. placed upon the decision of the Supreme
Court of America, in Albert A. Hoeper v. Tax Commissioner of
Wisconsin (1) and it is, therefore, necessary to consider it
in some detail. There, the appellant married a widow. Both
the parties had separate incomes and made separate returns.
Under the relevant tax Act, the incomes of the wife were
added to the-income of the husband for the purpose of
taxation. The result was to increase the rate of the
appellant’s income-tax and to charge him with a tax
otherwise payable by his wife. It was contended that the
said law deprived the tax-payer of the due process and
equal, protection of the law. Roberts, J., who expressed
the majority view, accepted the contention and struck out
the law. The learned Judge observed thus :
"We have no doubt that, because of the
fundamental conceptions which underlie our
system, any attempt by a state to measure the
tax on one person’s property or income by
reference to the property or income of another
is contrary to due process of law as guaran-
teed by the 14th Amendment. That which is not
in fact the taxpayer’s income cannot be made
such by calling it income."
The Court of Appeal in that case assigned two reasons for
sustaining the provisions one was that the provisions under
attack were necessary to prevent frauds and evasions of tax
by married persons, and, the other was that it was
(1) (1931) 76 L. Ed. 248, 251.
993
a regulation of marriage. The first-reason was not accepted
by the Supreme Court on the ground that the claimed
necessity could not justify the otherwise unconstitutional
exaction ; and the second reason was rejected for the reason
that it could hardly be claimed that a mere difference in
social relations so altered the taxable status of one
receiving income as to justify a different measure for the
tax. Holmes, J., in his dissenting judgment, justified his
view on the ground that the statute was the outcome of
thousand years of history indicating that husband and wife
were one and also for the reason that it had a tendency to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 10
prevent tax evasion. Prima facie the majority view supports
the contention of learned counsel for the petitioner, but a
deeper scrutiny reveals fundamental differences between that
decision and the present case. There, there was no question
of any partnership between husband and wife, and the income
of the wife was added to that of the husband with the result
that he had to pay not only increased rate on his income but
also a portion of the tax otherwise payable by wife ; in the
present case, the impugned provisions do not impose any such
general liability but confine it only to a case where the
husband takes his wife in partnership. There is a greater
scope for fraudulent evasion by constituting fictitious.
partnership along with one’s wife and minor children than in
a case of separate income of the spouses derived from
different sources. That apart, the present social and
economic position of women in India as compared with their
compeers in America, even as it existed in 1931, is so low
that it would be inappropriate to apply the decision made in
America to a similar case arising in India. A wife in
India, particularly if she be illiterate large majority of
them are illiterate-would ordinarily be in economic matters
a tool in the hands of her husband. Many things are done in
her
994
name without her knowledge of the same. When the
Legislature of this country, which is assumed to know the
conditions of the people and their requirements, with the
awareness of this particular widespread fraudulent device in
the matter of evasion of taxes, made a law to prevent the
said fraud, it is difficult for this Court in the absence of
any counterbalancing circumstances to hold, on the analogy
drawn from American decisions, that the need for such a law
is not in existence. On the contrary there is a direct
decision of the Madras High Court in B. M. Amina Umma v.
Income Tax Officer, Kozhikode (1) sustaining the said
provision on the ground of reasonable classification.
Rajagopalan, J., speaking for the division bench, after
considering the relevant decisions on the subject, observed
thus :
"The reasonableness or otherwise of a
classification has to be decided with
reference to all the circumstances of the case
including the social and economic structure
prevalent in the area where the taxing statute
is in operation.......... An attempt to
prevent by legislation an evasion of just tax
liability and the necessary classification to
give effect to that object cannot, in our
view, be termed unreasonable."
With respect we, give our full assent to the said
observations. We, therefore, reject this contention.
The next attack on the validity of the provisions is based
upon Art. 19 (1) (f) and (g) of the Constitution. The said
constitutional provisions read :
Art. 19(1) : All citizens shall have the right-
(f) to acquire, hold and dispose of property; and
(1) (1954) 26 I.T.R. 137,150.
995
(g) to practise ’any profession, or to carry on any
occupation, trade or business.
It was argued that as the husband is statutorily made to pay
certain amount as tax on the income of his wife, to that
extent, he is deprived of his property by the State action
and, therefore, his fundamental right under s. 19 (1) (f) is
infringed. The impugned statutory provision, the argument
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 10
proceeds, is an unreasonable restriction on the said right,
as the husband is, compelled ’to pay tax on the income of
his wife and children who are in law distinct legal persons.
The learned Additional Solicitor-General broadly contended
that a tax imposed by authority of law cannot be questioned
on the ground that the law infringes the provisions of Art.
19 of the constitution. We cannot see any justification for
this contention in any of the constitutional provisions.
The relevant provisions of the Constitution read :
Art. 265 : No tax shall be levied or collected
except by authority of law.
Art. 13 (1) : All laws in force in the
territory of India immediately before the
commencement of this Constitution, in so far
as they are inconsistent with the provisions
of this Part shall, to the extent of such
inconsistency, be void.
(3) In this Article, unless the context
other wise requires,-
(a) ’law’ includes any Ordinance, order,
bye-law, rule, regulation, notification,
custom or usage having in the territory of
India the force of law
(b)"law in force’ includes laws passed or made
by a Legislature or other competent authority
in the territory of India before the
996
commencement of this Constitution and not
previously repealed, notwithstanding that any
such law or any part thereof may not be then
in operation either at all or in particular
areas."
A combined and plain reading of the said provisions makes it
abundantly clear that a law which is inconsistent with any
of the provisions of Part III is void. It cannot be denied
that a law providing for levy and collection of taxes is a
law within the meaning of Part III of the Constitution, and
therefore it must stand the test laid down by Art. 13 of the
Constitution. The ’law’ in Art. 265 of the Constitution
must be a valid law. A law to be valid must not only be one
passed by the Legislature in exercise of a power conferred
on it, but must also be one that does not infringe the
fundamental rights declared by the Constitution. When a
licence fee was imposed by a municipality under a bye-law
framed in excess of the power conferred on it by the
provisions of the U. P. Municipalities Act, this Court in
Mohammad Yasin v. The Town Area Committee, Jalalabad (1)
held that the enforcement of the said bye-law against a
citizen constituted an infringement of his right under Art.
19 (1)(g) of the Constitution. Where a State sought to
impose sales-tax in exercise of a power conferred under a
provision which was ultra vires the State Legislature, this
Court held in Himmatlal Harilal Mehta v. The State of Madhya
Pradesh (2) that a threat by the said State to realise tax
from the assesse without the authority of law by using the.
coercive machinery of the impugned Act was a sufficient
infrigement of his fundamental right under Art. 19(1)(g) of
the Constitution. The same principle must necessarily apply
even in a case where the law imposing a tax is void as
offending the fundamental rights under the Constitution.
This
(1) (1952) S.C.R. 572.
(2) (1954) S.C.R. 1122.
997
Court in Kavalappara Kottarathil Kochuni &Moopil Nair v.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 10
State of Madras (1), after considering the earlier decisions
observed thus :
"It is, therefore, manifest that the law must
satisfy two tests before it can be a valid
law, namely, (1) that the appropriate legis-
lature has competency to make the law ; (2)
that it does not take away or abridge any of
the fundamental rights enumerated in Part III
of the Constitution."
Section 16 (3)(a) of the Act must, therefore, pass both the
tests and if it violates any of the provisions of Art. 19,
to the extent it is inconsistent with the said provisions,
it will be void. This view is in consonance with that
expressed by this Court in Kunnathat Thathunni Moopil Nair
v. The State of Kerala (2). There, the petitioners impugned
the constitutionality of the Travancore-Cochin Land Tax Act,
XV of 1955, as amended by the Travancore-Cochin Land Tax
(Amendment) Act, X of 1957, and Sinha, C. J., speaking for
the Court held that the Act was void as infringing not only
Art. 14 of the Constitution but also Art. 19 (1) (f)
thereof. The learned Chief Justice, after considering the
relevant provisions of the Act and having regard to the
unreasonable nature of the restrictions, came to the
conclusion that the provisions of the Act were
unconstitutional viewed from the angle of the provisions of
Art. 19 (1)(f) of the Constitution.
We cannot, therefore, accept broad contention of the learned
Additional Solicitor-General that a tax law cannot be
questioned on the ground that it infringes Art. 19 of the
Constitution.
Even so the learned Additional Solicitor-General contended
that the provisions of
(1) (1960) 3 S.C.R. 887, 91 1.
(2) (1961) 3 S.C.R. 77.
998
s. 16 (3) (a) (1) and (ii) of the Act constituted only
reasonable restrictions on the exercise of the rights
conferred under Art. 19(1)(f) and (g) of the Constitution,
in the interest of the general public.
Learned counsel for the petitioner argued that the
restrictions are not reasonable for the following reasons
(1) the husband is made to pay tax on the income which his
wife derived from the business, that is, a tax is levied on
one person on the income of another ; (2) such an imposition
’not only prevents a husband from taking his wife as a
partner in his business but also prevents a wife, who has
got a business ’of her own, from taking her husband as a
partner in the business ; (3) the husband has to pay a tax
at a rate higher than that he would have to pay if the
income of the wife was not added to his income ; (4) the
same situation is created inter se between a parent and his
minor children vis-a-vis their joint business. Learned,
counsel, therefore, contended that the provisions prevented
the honest pooling of resources of the members of a family
so intimately connected with each other to the detriment of
the family prosperity, and that it amounted to an
unreasonable restriction on the said fundamental rights.
There is some plausibility in this argument, but if an
overall picture of the situation is taken, the
reasonableness of the restrictions will be apparent. In the
State of Madras v. V. G. Row (1) Pattanjali Sastri, C. J.,
lays down the following test of reasonableness
"The nature of the right alleged to have been
infringed, the underlying purpose of the
restrictions imposed, the extent and urgency
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 10
of the evil sought to be remedied thereby, the
disproportion of the imposition, the prevail-
ing conditions at the time, should all enter
into the judicial verdict."
So judged, can it be said that the restrictions imposed
(1) (1952) S.C.R. 597.
999
under the impugned provisions are not reasonable? The
object sought to be achieved was to prevent the prevalent
abuse, namely, evasion of tax by an individual doing
business under a partnership nominally entered with his wife
or minor children. The scope of the provisions is limited
only to a few of the intimate members of a family who
ordinarily are under the protection of the assessee and are
dependants of him. The persons selected by the provisions,
namely, wife and minor children, cannot also be ordinarily
expected to carry on their business independently with their
own funds when the husband or the father is alive and when
they are under his protection. Doubtless some of the said
partnerships may be genuine and the wife or minor children
may have contributed capital to the business; but the
provisions do not in any way affect their rights and even
the liability inter se between the husband and the wife or
the minor children, as the case may be, in respect of the
tax paid. It is true that in computing the total income of
an individual for the purpose of assessment, their income in
their capacity as partners shall be included in the income
of the individual; but the section doer, not prevent the
husband or the father, as the case may be, from debiting
against them in the partnership accounts that part of the
tax referable to the share or shares of their income. It
may be that a father or a husband may have to pay tax at a
higher rate than ordinarily he would have to pay if the
addition of the wife’s or children’s income to his own
brings his total income to a higher slab. But it may not
necessarily be so in a case where the income of the former
is not appreciable ; even if it is appreciable, he can debit
a part of the excess payment to his wife and children. In
short, the firm, though registered, would be treated as a
distinct unit of assessment, with the difference that,
unlike in the case of a registered firm, the entire income
of the unit is added to the personal income of the father or
the husband
1000
as the case may be. This mode of taxation may be a little
hard on a husband or a father in the case of genuine
partnership with wife or minor children, but that is offset,
to a large extent, by the beneficient results that flow
therefrom to the public, namely, the prevention of evasion
of income-tax, and also by the fact that, by and large, the
additional payment of tax made on the income of the wife or
the minor children will ultimately I be borne by them in the
final accounting between them. In these circumstances, we
cannot say that the provisions of s. 16(3) of the Act impose
an unreasonable restriction on the fundamental rights of the
petitioner under Art. 19(1)(f) and (g) of the Constitution.
In the result, the petition fails and is dismissed with
costs.
Petition dismissed.
1