Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX,WEST BENGAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
A. W. FIGGIES & CO., AND OTHERS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
24/09/1953
BENCH:
MAHAJAN, MEHR CHAND
BENCH:
MAHAJAN, MEHR CHAND
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
CITATION:
1953 AIR 455 1954 SCR 171
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1956 SC 354 (15)
RF 1967 SC 617 (40,41)
D 1974 SC1026 (15)
R 1979 SC 379 (5)
RF 1982 SC1085 (9)
F 1985 SC1143 (4,8)
RF 1986 SC 376 (22)
ACT:
Income-tax Act (XI of 1922), s. 25(4)-Firm paying tax in
1918 -Conversion to limited company in 1947-Right to relief
under s. 25(4)-Change in personnel of firm in 1939 and
1947, effect of.
HEADNOTE:
For purposes of assessment to income-tax, a firm is a
different entity distinct from its partners, and a mere
change in the constitution of the firm does not bring into
existence a new assessable unit or a distinct assessable
entity.
(1) 67 I.A. 464,481.
172
A firm consisting of three partners, A, B and C, carried on
the business of tea brokers and paid income-tax under the
Income-tax Act of 1918. There were several changes in the
personnel of the partners and in 1939 the firm consisted of
C, D and E. C retired and in 1945 a new partnership deed was
written up between D, E and F and they carried on the
business. In 1947 the partnership was converted into a
limited company. The Income-tax authorities refused to give
relief under s. 25(4) of the Income-tax Act as the partners
of the firm in 1939 were different from the partners of the
firm in 1947:
Held, that in spite of the changes in the constitution of
the firm, the business of the firm as originally constituted
continued right from its inception to the time it was
succeeded by the limited company and the firm was the same
unit all through; the reconstitution of the firm in 1945 did
not make it a different unit, and the firm was therefore
entitled to relief under s. 25(4) of the Act.
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 77 of 1952.
Appeal from the Judgment and Order dated the 9th January,
1951, of the High Court of Judicature at Calcutta (Harries
C. J. and Banerjee J.) in its Special Jurisdiction (Income-
tax) in Income-tax Reference No. 70 of 1950.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General for India (Porus A. Mehta,
with him) for the appellant.
N. C. Chatterjee (B. Sen, with him) for the respondents.
1953. September 24. The Judgment of the Court was
delivered by
MAHAJAN J.-This is an appeal from a judgment of the High
Court of Judicature at Calcutta delivered in a reference
under section 66(1) of the Indian Incometax Act, whereby the
High Court answered the question referred in the
affirmative.
The assessee is a partnership concern. When income-tax was
paid under the Act of 1918, the partnership concern
consisted of three partners, Mathews, Figgies and Notley.
The name of the firm was A. W. Figgies & Co., and its’
business was that of tea brokers. There were several
changes in the constitution of the firm resulting in a
change in the shares of
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the partners. In 1924, Mathews went out and his share was
taken over by Figgies and Notley. In 1926 another partner
Squire was introduced. In 1932 Figgies went out, and from
1932 to 1939 the partnership consisted only of Notley and
Squire. In 1939 Hillman was brought in and the partnership
consisted of these three partners. In 1943 Notley went out
and the partnership business was carried on by the two
partners, Squire and Hillman. In 1945 Gilbert was brought
in. This arrangement continued up to 31st May, 1947, when
the partnership was converted into a limited company.
For the assessment year 1947 -48 the assessee claimed that
it was entitled to relief under section 25(4) of the Act as
the partnership firm had been succeeded by a private limited
company. There was a provision in the partnership deed of
1939 that on the retirement of any partner the partnership
would not be determined but would be carried on by the
remaining partners. It appears that a fresh partnership
deed was drawn up in the year 1945 when Gilbert was brought
in. The partnership constituted by these three partners
continued to carry on the same business that had been
started when the tax was paid under the Act of 1918. From
the statement of the case it does not appear that apart from
the mere change in the personnel of the partners and in
their respective shares there was any actual dissolution of
the firm, and any division of its assets and liabilities or
a succession to its business by any outside person.
The Income-tax Officer disallowed the claim of the assessee
on the ground that the partners of the firm in 1939 being
different from the partners of the firm in 1947, no relief
could be given to the applicant. The Appellate Assistant
Commissioner upheld this view. On appeal to the Income-tax
Tribunal, this decision was reversed and relief was granted
to the applicant under section 25(4). Before the Tribunal
it was argued on behalf of the Commissioner that the
partnership was nothing but an association of persons and
therefore, in 24
174
order to get relief under section 25(4) of the Act the
partners of 1939 must be the same as the partners of 1947
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when the firm was succeeded by the company. The Tribunal
repelled this contention and held that the relief
contemplated by section 25(4) of the Income-tax Act was to
be given to the business and not to the persons carrying on
the business and that mere changes in the constitution of
the firm had to be ignored. It was not disputed before the
Tribunal that the business of the partnership firm of A. W.
Figgies & Co. continued as tea brokers right from its
inception till the time it was succeeded by the limited
company. The Tribunal took the view that for purposes of
incometax the firm was to be regarded as having a separate
juristic existence apart from the partners carrying on the
business and that the firm could be carried on even if there
was a change in its constitution.
At the instance of the appellant the Tribunal stated a case
and referred the following question to the High Court under
section 66(1) of the Act :
"In the facts and circumstances of the case, was the firm as
constituted on 31st May, 1947, entitled to the relief under
section 25(4) of the Indian Incometax Act ?"
The High Court answered the question referred in the
affirmative. It upheld the view taken by the Tribunal.
It was contended before us that the construction placed by
the High Court upon section 25(4) of the Act was erroneous
and was not warranted by the language of the section and
that by reason of the change in the composition of the firm
the same firm did not continue throughout and hence there
was no right to relief under section 25(4) of the Act in the
changed firm. In our opinion, this contention is without
force. Section 25 (4) is in these terms:-
"Where the person who was at the commencement of the Indian
Income-tax (Amendment) Act, 1939, carrying on any business,
profession or vocation on which tax was at any time charged
under the provisions of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1918, is
succeeded in such capacity by another person, the change not
being
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merely a change in the constitution of a partnership, no tax
shall be payable by the first mentioned person in respect of
the income, profits and gains of the period between the end
of the previous year and the date of such succession, and
such person may further claim that the income, profits and
gains of the previous year shall be deemed to have been the
income, profits and gains of the said period. Where any
such claim is made, an assessment shall be made on the basis
of the income, profits and gains of the said period, and, if
an amount of tax has already been paid in respect of the
income, profits and gains of the previous year exceeding the
amount payable on the basis of such assessment, a refund
shall be given of the difference."
The section does not regard a mere change in the personnel
of the partners as amounting to succession and disregards
such a change. It follows from the provisions of the
section that a mere change in the constitution of the
partnership does not necessarily bring into existence a new
assessable unit or a distinct assessable entity and in such
a case there is no devolution of the business as a whole.
It is true that under the law of partnership a firm has no
legal existence apart from its partners and it is merely a
compendious name to describe its partners but it is also
equally true that under that law there is no dissolution of
the firm by the mere incoming or outgoing of partners. A
partner can retire with the consent of the other partners
and a person can be introduced in the partnership by the
consent of the other partners. The reconstituted firm can
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carry on its business in the same firm’s name till
dissolution. The law with respect to retiring partners as
enacted in the Partnership Act is to a certain extent a
compromise between the strict doctrine of English common law
which refuses to see anything in the firm but a collective
name for individuals carrying on business in partnership and
the mercantile usage which recognizes the firm as a distinct
person or quasi corporation. But under the Income-tax Act
the position is somewhat different. A firm can be charged
as a distinct assessable entity as distinct from its
176
partners who can also be assessed individually. Section 3
which is the charging section is in these terms:
Where any Central Act enacts that income-tax shall be
charged for any year at any rate or rates tax at that rate
or those rates shall be charged for that year in accordance
with, and subject to the provisions of, this Act in respect
of the total income of the previous year of every
individual, Hindu undivided family, company and local
authority, and of every firm and other association of
persons or the partners of the firm or the members of the
association individually."
The partners of the firm are distinct assessable entities,
while the firm as such is a separate and distinct unit for
purposes of assessment. Sections 26, 48 and 55 of the Act
fully bear out this position. These provisions of the Act
go to show that the technical view of the nature of a
partnership under English law or Indian law cannot be taken
in applying the law of incometax. The true question to
decide is one of identity of the unit assessed under the
Income-tax Act, 1918, which paid double tax in the year
1939, with the unit to whose business the private limited
company succeeded in the year 1947. We have no doubt that
the Tribunal and the High Court were right in holding that
in spite of the mere changes in the constitution of the
firm, the business of the firm as originally constituted
continued as tea brokers right from its inception till the
time it was succeeded by the limited company and that it was
the same unit all through, carrying on the same business, at
the same place and there was no cesser of that business or
any change in the unit. Reference was made by Mr. Daphtary
to the partnership deed drawn up in 1945. It was argued
that a different firm was then constituted. The High Court
refused to look into this document as it had not been relied
upon before the Tribunal and no reference bad been
specifically made to it in the order of the Incometax
Officer or the Assistant Commissioner. The Tribunal in
spite of this document took the view that under the
Partnership Act a firm could be carried on even if there was
a change in its constitution. This
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document is silent on the -question as to what happened to
the assets and liabilities of the firm that was, constituted
under the deed of 1939. To all intents and purposes the
firm as reconstituted was not a different unit but it
remained the same unit in spite of the change in its
constitution.
The result is that we see no substantial grounds for
disturbing the opinion given by the High Court on the
question submitted to it. The appeal therefore fails and is
dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
Agent for the appellant: G. H. Rajadhyaksha.
Agent for the respondents: P. K. Chatterjee.
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