Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KISHANCHAND LUNIDASINGH BAJAJ
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, MYSORE
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
10/02/1966
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
WANCHOO, K.N.
SIKRI, S.M.
RAMASWAMI, V.
CITATION:
1966 AIR 1583 1966 SCR (3) 573
CITATOR INFO :
R 1973 SC 651 (8)
ACT:
Indian income-tax Act, 1922 (11 of 1922) S. 16(2)-Real owner
and registered owner of shares different-Tax liability on
dividend on whom.
HEADNOTE:
B and his sons constituted a Hindu undivided family which
Owned certain shares in public limited comanies.The family
started business in money lending in the name of a firm and
in the books of account of the firm the shared which stood
registered in the name of B with the companies were credited
as the capital of the business. Two sons separated from the
family, each receiving sum in lieu of his share, and they
formed a partnership with the rest of the members of the
family for carrying business in the name of the same firm.
Under the partnership the two separated sons were entitled
to their sham and the remaining shares were to belong to B
as Karta of the family. Dividends received in respect of
the shares were credited to the profit and loss account of
the firm. In assessment proceedings, it was claimed that.
the shares which stood registered in the name of B belonged
not to the Hindu undivided family but to the firm. The
claim was rejected. In appeal to this Court it was
contended that where one taxable entity is the registered
holder of shares in a company and the real owner, of the
shares is another taxable entity, the registered shareholder
alone’ is liable to be assessed to tax in respect of the
dividend from these shares and therefore B alone was liable
to be taxed in respect of the dividend income from the
shares, and not the Hindu undivided family.
HELD: The contention must fail.
Tax being charged by a. 3 of the income-tax Act upon
dividend come and not being excluded under s. 4(3), such
income would be, chargeable to income-tax under the Act in
the hands of the person to whom it accrues or by whom it is
received. A company for its purposes does not recognize any
trust or equitable ownership in shares; it merely recognizes
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the registered shareholder as the owner and pays the
dividend to that shareholder. But the shares may, because
of a trust or other fiduciary relationship, belong to a
person other than the registered share holder and the
dividend distributed by the company would for the se of tax
be deemed to accrue or arise to the real owner of the
shares. [576 A-C]
Section (2) of a. 16 does not operate as an exemption from
the vale of either a. 3 or 94(1) of the Act nor does it
provide that liability to tat arises only when the person by
whom dividend is received from the company is the real owner
of the shares. Sub-section (5) of S. 18 also does not lead
to that result. In so far as it deals with dividend which
is "grossed up", sub-s. (5) of s. 18 forms a corollary to s.
16(2). Therefore when tax is paid on behalf of a
shareholder and deduction Is de from dividend, it is given
to the shareholder for the tax paid in his final assessment.
But the scheme of "grossing up" is not ac- ceptible of the
interpretation that the income from dividend is to be
regarded as the income only of the registered shareholder
and not of the real owner of the share. [578 G-579 B]
Sup. CI/66-5
574
Income-far Officer, North Satara v. Arvind N. Mafatlal &
Ors., 45 I.T.R. 271 and Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay
City II v. Shakuntala and Ors., 43 I.T.R. 352, referred to.
Howrah Trading Company Ltd,. v. Commissioner of Income-tax,
Central, Calcutta, 36 I.T.R. 215, explained.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURJSIDCTION : Civil Appeal No. 234 of 1965.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
July. 19,1963 of the Mysore High Court in I. T. R. C. No. 6
of 1963.
K. Srinivavan and R. Gopalakrishnan, for the appellant.
C. K. Daphtary, Attorney-General, R. Ganapathy Iyer, R. H.
Dhebar and R. N. Sachthey, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shah, J. Kishanchand Bajaj and his seven sons formed a Hindu
undivided family which owned shares exceeding Rs. 91,000 in
value, in public limited companies. The family commenced
business in money-lending and gs commission agents on May
16, 1956 in the name of Messrs. Mangoomal Kishanchand and
in the books of account of the firm the shares which stood
registered in the name of Kishanchand with the companies
were credited as capital of the business. On August 22,
1956 Shyam Sundar and Girdharlal, two of the sons of
Kishanchand separated from the family, each receiving rupees
two lakhs in lieu of his share. On August 23, 1956 a
partnership was formed between Kishanchand representing the
Hindu undivided family of himself and his five sons and
Shyam Sundar and Girdharial, for carrying on the business of
Messrs. Mangoomal Kishanchand. Under the deed of partner-
ship, Shyam Sundar and Girdharlal were each entitled to a
seventh share and the remaining five-sevenths share was to
belong to Kishanchand as karta of the Hindu undivided
family. Dividends received in respect of the shares were
credited to the profit & loss account of the firm.
In proceedings for assessment of the firm for the year 1959-
60 it was claimed that the shares which stood registered in
the name of Kishanchand belonged not to the Hindu undivided
family but to the firm of Messrs. Mangoomal Kishanchand.
The Income-tax Officer rejected that contention. He held
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that the Hindu undivided family was "the real and legal
owner of the shares", and that the shares were at no time
the property of the firm. The order of the Income-tax
Office was confirmed in appeal by the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner. In ,,second appeal to the Income-tax
Appellate Tribunal it was contended on behalf of the Hindu
undivided family Oat the dividend from the shares
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could be assessed only in the hands of the person who held
ownership "legal as well as equitable" in the shares, and as
the family had ceased to be the "equitable owner" of the
shares, the Hindu undivided family could not be assessed
under the Income-tax Act, 1922 on the dividend. The
Tribunal rejected the contention. The Tribunal then
referred under s. 66 (1) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922,
the following question to the High Court of Mysore for
opinion :
"Whether on the facts and circumstances of the
case, the dividend income from shares standing
in the name of Kishanchand Lunidasingh Bajaj
and acquired with the funds of the Hindu
undivided family of which the said person was
the karta was assessable in the hands of the
assessee family ?"
The High Court answered the question in the affirmative, and
with special leave the Hindu undivided family has appealed
to this Court.
In this appeal it was urged that where one taxable entity is
the registered holder of shares in a company and the real
owner of the shares is another taxable entity, the
registered shareholder alone is liable to be assessed to tax
in respect of the dividend from those shares, and therefore
Kishanchand alone was liable to be taxed in respect of the
dividend income from the phares, and not the Hindu undivided
family. Reliance in support of this contention was placed
upon s. 16 (2) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, and
certain observations made by this Court in the judgment in
Howrah Trading Company Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax,
Central, Calcutta.(1)
In our judgment the contention is wholly without substance.
Under s. 3, 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 is charged to tax. By s.4 the
total income of any previous year of any person includes,
subject to the provisions of the Act, all income, profits
and gains from whatever source derived, which are received
or deemed to be received in the taxable territories in such
year by or on behalf of such person, or if such person is
resident in the taxable territories during such year the
income which accrue or arise or is deemed to accrue or arise
to him in the taxable territories during such year, or
accrue or arise without the taxable territory during such
year, or having accrued or arisen to him without the taxable
territories or brought in the taxable territories during
such year, or if such person is not residing to the taxable
(1) [1959] Sup. 2 S.C.R, 448, 36 I.T.R. 215.
576
territories during such year, accrue or arise or are deemed
to accrue or arise to him. By sub-s. (3) of g.4 any income.
profits or gains., falling within the clauses (i) to (xxii)
tire not liable to be included in the total income of the
person receiving them. Tax being charged by s: 3 upon
dividend income and not being excluded under s.4 such
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’income would be chargeable to income-tax under the Act in,
the hands of the person to whom it accrues or by whom it is
received. A company for its purposes does not recognize any
trust or equitable ownership in shares it merely recognises
the registered shareholder as the owner and pays the
dividend to that shareholder. But the shares may, because of
a trust or other fiduciary relationship, belong to a person
other than the registered shareholder, and the dividend
distributed by the company would for the purpose of tax be
deemed to accrue or rise to the real owner of the shares.
Section 16 of the Indian Income-tax Act deals with the
exemptions and exclusions in determining the total income.
The expression, "total income" is defined in S. 2 (1,5): it
means "total amount of income, profits and gains referred to
in sub-section (1) of section 4, computed in the manner laid
down in this Act". Section 16, insofar as it is relevant,
provides
"(1) In computing the, total income of an
assessee-
(a) any sums exempted under the first
proviso to, subsection (1) of section 7, the
second and third provisos to section 8, sub-
sections (2), (3), (4) and (5) of section 14,
section 15, section 15B and section 15C shall
be included, and any sum exempted under
section 15A shall also be included except for
the purpose of determining the rates at which
income-tax (but not super-tax) is payable by
the assessee to whom the exemption is given;
(b) when the assesee is a partner of a firm,
then, whether the firm has made a profit or
loss, his share (whether a net profit or a net
loss) shall be taken to be any s salary,
interest, commission or other remuneration
payable to him by the firm in respect of the
previous year increased or decreased
respectively by his share in the balance of
the profit or loss of, the firm after the
deduction of any interest, salary, commission
or other remuneration payable to any partner
in respect of the previous year:
Provided . .. .. ..
"(c) all income arising to any person by
virtue of a settlement or disposition
whether
577
revocable or not, and whether effected before
or after the commencement of the Indian
Income tax (Amendment) Act, 1939 (VII of
1939), from assets remaining the property of
the settlor or disponer, shall be deemed to be
income of the settlor or disponer, and all
income arising to any person by virtue of a
revocable transfer of assets shall be deemed
to be income of the transferor;
Provided . . . . . . . . .
(2) For the purposes of inclusion in the total
income of an assessee.any dividend shall be
deemed to be income of the previous year in:
which it is paid, credited or distributed, or
deemed to have been paid, credited or distri-
buted to him, and shall be increased to such
amount. if income-tax (but not super-tax) at
the rate applicable to the total income of the
company without taking into account any rebate
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allowed or additional. income-tax charged for
the financial year in which the dividend is
paid, credited or distributed or deemed’ to
have been paid, credited or distributed, were
deducted therefrom, be equal to the amount of
the dividend
Provided . . . . . .
(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 minor
child of such individual as arises directly or
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 individual is a partner.
(iii) from assets transferred directly or in-
directly to the wife by the husband otherwise
than for adequate consideration or in
connection with an agreement to live apart; or
(iv) from assets transferred directly or in-
directly to the minor child, not being a
married daughter, by such individual otherwise
than for adequate consideration; and
"(b) so much of the income of any person or
association of persons as arises from assets
578
transfered otherwise than for adequate consi-
deration to the person or association by such
individual for the benefit of his wife or a
minor child or both."
Under the Income-tax Act, 1922, certain items of income are
exempt from liability to tax and do not enter into the
computation of total income: there are other items of
income, which though exempt from tax are liable to be
included in the, total income of the assessee for
determining the rate applicable. Sub-sections (1) & (3) of
s. 16 provide that certain income which does not accrue ,or
arise to the assessee or which is not received as income by
him is deemed to be part of his total income. These sub-
sections deal with inclusion of the specified classes of
income in the computation of total income. The only
difference between the two clauses is that sub-s. (1)
applies. to all assessees, whereas sub--; (3) applies to
individuals only. But sub-s. (2) does not direct the
inclusion of any item of income in the computation of the
total income of an assessee to whom it does not accrue or
arise: it is only a processing clause applicable in respect
of dividend income. In terms it provides that for the
purpose of inclusion of dividend in the total income of in
assessee, dividend shall be deemed to be income of the
previous year in which it is paid, credited or distributed,
or deemed to be paid, credited or distributed, and further
that the dividend shall be increased, or as it is sometimes
called "grossed up" by adding thereto the income-tax deemed
to have been paid by the company on behalf of the
shareholder.. The sub-section in the first instance
designates the year in which the dividend income is to be
included in the total income. Therefore dividend will be
included: in the income of the assessee in the year in which
it is paid, credited or distributed, or be deemed to be paid,
credited or distributed. Since the same income can not
be taxed twice over, dividend income will be taxed in the
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hands of the real owner of the shares and in the year
designated by s. 16(2). But by virtue of. the second
part of s. 16(2), dividend may be grossed up only if the
registered shareholder is the real owner of the shares. If
the registered holder is not the real owner of the shares
i.e. he is a trustee or benamidar for the real owner,
dividend income cannot be grossed up when including it in
the total income’ of the real owner. But sub-s. (2) of S.
16 does not operate as an exemption from the pale of either
S. 3 ’or s. 4(1) of the Act: nor does it provide that
liability to tax arises only when the person by whom
dividend is received from the company is the real owner ,of
the shares. Sub-section (5) of s. 18 also does not lead to
that result. The clause provides that deduction made by a
company and paid to the account of tie Central Government
in accordance with the provisions of S. 18 and any sum by
which a dividend has been increased under sub-s. (2) of s.
16 shall
579
be treated as payment of income-tax or super-tax on behalf
of the person from whose income the deduction was made, and
credit shall be given to him therefore. Insofar as it deals
with dividend which is "grossed up", sub-s. (5) of s. 18
forms a corollary to s. 16(2). Therefore when tax is paid
on behalf of a shareholder and deduction is made from
dividend, credit, is given to him for the tax paid in his
final assessment. But the scheme of "grossing up" is not
susceptible of the interpretation that the income from
dividend is to be regarded as the income only of the
registered shareholder and not of the real owner of the
shares.
The authorities of this Court which have interpreted s. 16
(2) may be reviewed. In Howrah Trading Company’s case (1)
it was held that a person who had purchased shares in a
company under a blank transfer and in whose name the shares
had not been registered in the books of the company is not a
"shareholder" in respect ,of such shares within the meaning
of s. 18(5) of the Income-tax Act, notwithstanding his
equitable right to receive dividend on such shares. Such a
person was therefore held not entitled to have the dividend
income grossed up under s. 16(2) of the Act by the addition
of the income-tax paid by the company in respect of those
shares, and to claim credit for the tax deducted at source
under s. 18(5) of the Act. In that case the only dispute
which arose was with regard to "grossing up". The dividend
income was included in the total income of the person who
was the real owner of the shares, though the shares were not
registered in his name. In Income-tax Officer, North Satara
v. Arvind N. Mafatlal & Others (2) it was held, following
the judgment in Howrah Trading Company’s’ case (1), that,
the registered shareholder alone is entitled to the benefit
of the credit for tax paid by the company under s. 18(5) and
the corresponding "grossing up" under s. 16(2). In that
case shares belonging to a firm registered under the Income-
tax Act were held in the names of three partners of the
firm. The Income-tax Officer sought to treat the dividend
from the shares as income of the firm and to "gross up" the
dividend by adding the income-tax paid. This Court held
that the only persons who were entitled to be treated as
shareholders to whom the provisions of ss. 16(2) and 18(5)
were attracted were the three partners. The judgment of
this Court in Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay City II v
Shakuntala and others (3)does not support any different
rule. That was a case in which a Hindu undivided family
held certain, shares in a company in the names of different
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members of the family. The Income-tax Officer applied the
provisions of s. 23A of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922,
before it was amended in 1955, and ordered that the
undistributed portion of the distributable income of the
(1) [1959] Supp. 2.S.C.R. 448.
(2) (1962) Supp. 3 S.C.R. 455: 45 I.T.R. 271.
(3) [1962] 2 S.C.R. 871 : 43 I.T.R. 352.
580
company shall be deemed to be distributed. In proceedings
for ,assessment the amount of deemed income appropriate to
the shares of the family was ordered by the Income-tax
Officer to be included in the income of the family. It was
held that the expression "shareholder" in S. 23A of the
Indian Income-tax Act meant the shareholder registered in
the books of the company. Therefore the amount appropriate
to the shares had to be included in the income of the
members of the family in whose names the shares stood in the
register of the company, and as the Hindu undivided family
was not a registered shareholder of the company, the amount
deemed to be distributed could not be assessed as the income
of the family under S. 23A. The Court in Shakuntala’s
case(1) was dealing with notional income. The amounts which
were no distributed by the company, but which by virtue of
an order under s. 23A of the Act were deemed to be
distributed were sought to be assessed and the Court held in
the light of the express provisions of s. 23A that the
undistributed, portion of the distributable income of the
company of the previous year as computed for income-tax
purposes shall be deemed to be distributed as dividend among
the shareholders. The decision of the Court was that for
the purpose of S. 23A, the expression shareholder" meant
only the registered shareholder and not an equitable owner.
The decision has no bearing on the true interpretation of S.
16(2).
Reliance was placed by counsel for the appellant on the
following observations made by Hid4yatullah, J., in
delivering the judgment of this Court in Howrah Trading
Company’s case (2)
"The words of section 18(5) must accordingly
be read in the light in which the word
"shareholder" has been used in the subsequent
sections, and read in that manner, the present
assesses, notwithstanding the equitable right
to the dividend, was not entitled to be
regarded as a "shareholder" for the purpose of
section 18(5) of the Act. That benefit can
only go to the person who, both in law and in
equity, is to be regarded as the owner of the
shares and between whom and the company exists
the bond of membership and ownership of a
share in the share capital of the company."
It was said by counsel for the appellants that by the use of
the expression "benefit can only go to the person who, both
in law and in equity, is to be regarded as the owner of the
shares", it was laid down that dividend may be taxed only in
the hands of a person who is "in law as well as in equity"
the shareholder. But thew observations are not susceptible
of any such meaning. Hidayatullah, J., in that case was
seeking to explain that dividend income cannot be "grossed
up" in tho hands of the real owner of shares
(1) [1962] 2 S.C.R. 871:43 I.T.R. 352.
(2) [1959] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 448.
581
if the shares are registered in the name of another person.
He did not say that the real owner of shares cannot be taxed
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in respect of dividend received by him, if the shares are
registered in the name of another person.
We are unable to accept the argument of counsel for the ap-
pellants that because the dividend income in respect of the
shares. cannot be "grossed up", and credit for tax paid
cannot be obtained by the appellants, the appellants are not
liable to be taxed in respect of dividend received by them.
There is, no provision in the Act which, supports this plea,
and the scheme of the Act lends no countenance to an
expedient which may lead to gross evasion of tax.
The appeal therefore fails and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
582