Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
JODHA MAL KUTHIALA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, PUNJAB, JAMMU &KASHMIR, HIMACHAL
DATE OF JUDGMENT09/09/1971
BENCH:
HEGDE, K.S.
BENCH:
HEGDE, K.S.
GROVER, A.N.
CITATION:
1972 AIR 126 1972 SCR (1) 639
1971 SCC (3) 369
CITATOR INFO :
R 1984 SC 420 (38)
E&D 1987 SC 522 (17)
ACT:
Income-tax Act, s. 9(1)-Property left by evacuee in
Pakistan-Administered by Custodian under provisions of
Pakistan (Administration of Evacuee Property) Ordinance 15
of 1949-Evacuee whether continues. ,owner’ of property for
purpose of s. 9 of the Income-tax Act, 1922.
HEADNOTE:
The assessee was a .,registered firm deriving income from
securities, property, business and other- sources. In 1946
it purchased a hotel in ’Lahore for a sum of Rs. 46 lacs.
For that purpose it raised a loan of Rs. 30 lacs from a bank
and a loan of Rs. 18 lacs from one R. The ’loan taken from
the, bank was largely repaid but with R the assessee came to
an agreement whereby R accepted a half share in the said
property in lieu of the loan advanced and-. also 1/3rd of
the outstanding liability of the bank. This arrangement
came into effect on November 1, 1951. After the creation of
Pakistan, Lahore became a part of Pakistan and the hotel in
question was declared evacuee property. As such it came to
vest in the Custodian in Pakistan. In its returns for the
assessment years 1952-53, 1955-56 and 1956-57 the assessee
claimed certain amounts as losses on account of interest
payable to the bank but showed the gross annual letting
value from the said property at Nil. The Income-tax Officer
held that since the property had vested in the Custodian no
income or loss from that property could be considered in the
assessee’s case. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner
confirmed the order of the Income-tax Officer. The
Appellate Tribunal however came to the conclusion that the
assessee still continued to be the owner of the property for
the purpose of the computation of loss, and the interest
paid was a deductible allowance under s. 9(1) (iv) of the
Income-tax Act, 1922. In. reference the High Court on an
analysis of the various provisions of the Pakistan
(Administration of Evacuee Property) Ordinance.15 of. 1949
came to the conclusion that for the purpose of s. 9 of the
Act-the assessee could not be considered as the owner of
that property: ’In the assesee’s appeal to this Court it was
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contended that the property vested in the Custodian only
for. the purpose of administration and the assessee still
continued to be its- owner.
HELD : Under the Pakistan (Administration of Evacuee
Property) Ordinance 1949 the evacuee could not take
possession of his property. He could not lease that
property. He could not sell the property without the
consent of the custodian. He could not mortgage that
property. He could not realise the income of the property.
All the rights that the evacuee had in the property were
exercisable by the Custodian excepting that he could not
appropriate the proceeds to his own use. The evacuee had
only a beneficial interest in the property. In the eye of
the law the Custodian who had all the powers of the owner
was the owner of the property. His position_ was no less
than that a Trustee. [643 F-644 A]
Section 9 of the Income-tax Act,- 1922, brings.to tax the
income from property and. not the interest of a. person in
the property. A property cannot be owned by two persons,
each one having independent and exclusive right over it.
Hence for the purpose of s. 9 the owner must be
640
that person who can exercise the rights of the owner, not on
behalf of the owner but in his own right. Accordingly the
assessee was not the owner of the property in question
during the relevant assessment years for the purpose of s. 9
of the Act. [644 D]
It is true that equitable considerations are irrelevant in
interpreting tax laws. But those laws like all other laws
have to be interpreted reasonably and in consonance with
justice. If the thousands of evacuee who left practically
all their properties as well as businesses in Pakistan had
been considered as the owners of those properties and
businesses as long as the ’ordinance’ was in force then
those unfortunate persons would have had to pay income-tax
on the basis of the annual letting value of their properties
and on the income, gains and properties of the business left
by them in Pakistan though they did not get a paisa out of
those properties and business. Fortunately no one in the
past interpreted the law in the manner suggested by the
assessee. [644 E-G]
Official Assignee for Bengal (Estate of Jnanendra Nath
Pramanik), 5 I.T.R. 233, Commissioner of Inland Revenue v.
Fleming, 14 T.C. 78 and .Sir Currimbhoy Ibrahim Baronetcy
Trust v. C.I.T., Bombay, 2 I.T.R. 148, applied.
Amar Singh v. Custodian, Evacuee Property, Punjab, [1957]
S.C.R. 801, distinguished.
P.C. Lai Choudhary v. C.I.T., 16 I.T.R. 123 and Nawab
Bahadur of Murshidabad v. C.I.T., West Bengal, 28 I.T.R.
510, considered.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 1970 to
1973 of 1968.
Appeals from the judgment and order dated September 20, 1967
of the Delhi High Court in Income-tax Reference Nos. 2 :and
3 of 1967.
V.C. Mahajan and H. K. Puri, for the appellant (in all
the appeals)
V.S. Desai, R. N. Sachthey and B. D. Sharma, for the
respondent (in all the appeals).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Hegde, J. In these appeals by certificate, the only question
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arising for decision is : "whether on the facts and in the
circumstances of the case, the assessee. continued to be the
owner of the property for the purposes of computation of
income under S. 9 of the Income-tax Act, 1922" (to be
hereinafter referred to as the Act). A Full Bench of the
Delhi High Court speaking through S. K. Kapur, J. answered
that question in the negative. Being dissatisfied with that
decision the assesses has brought these appeals.
Now turning to the facts of the case, the concerned assess-
ment years are 1952-53, 1955-56 and 1956-57, the relevant
accounting periods being financial years ending March 31,
1952, March 31, 1955 and March 31, 1956. The assesses is a
registered
641
firm deriving income from interest on securities, property,
business and other sources. Sometime In the year 1946 it
purchased the Nedous Hotel in Lahore for a sum of Rs’ 46
lakhs. For that purpose it raised a loan of Rs. 30 lakhs
from M/s. Bharat Bank Ltd., Lahore and a loan of Rs. 18
lakhs from the Raja of Jubbal. The loan taken from the bank
was partly repaid but as regards the loan taken from the
Raja, the assessee came to an agreement with the Raja under
which the Raja accepted a half share in the said property in
lieu of the loan advanced and also 1/3rd of the outstanding
liability of the bank. This arrangement came into effect on
November 1, 1951. After the creation of Pakistan, declared
an evacuee property and consequently vested in the Custodian
in the Pakistan.
In its return for the relevant assessment years, the
assessee claimed losses of Rs. 1,00,723.- Rs. 1,16,599/- and
Rs. 1,16,599/- respectively but showed the gross annual
letting. value from the said property at Nil. The loss
claimed was stated to be on account of interest payable to
the bank. Since the property in question has vested in the
Custodian of Evacuee Property, in Pakistan, the Income-tax
Officer held that no income or loss from that property can
be considered in the assessee’s case. He accordingly
disallowed the assessees claim in respect of the interest
paid to the bank. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner-
confirmed the order of the Income-tax Officer. In second
appeal the Tribunal came to the conclusion that the assessee
still continued to be the owner’ of the property for the
purpose of computation of loss. The Tribunal held that the
interest paid is a deductable allowance under s. 9(1)(iv) of
the Act. In arriving it that conclusion, the Tribunal
relied on its earlier decision in the case of the assessee
in respect of the assessment year 1951-52. thereafter at the
instance of the assessee, the Tribunal submitted the
question set out earlier. Ile High Court on an analysis of
the various provisions of the Pakistan (Administration of
Evacuee property) Ordinance, 1949 (XV of 1049) (to be
hereinafter erred to as the ’Ordinance) came to the
conclusion that for the purpose of s. 9 of the Act, the
assasee cannot be considered as .he owner of that property.
It was urged by Mr. V. C. Mahajan, learned Counsel for the
assessee that the High Court erred in opining that the
assessee was not the owner of the property, for the purpose
of s. 9 of the Act. According to him the property vested in
the Custodian only for the purpose of administration and the
assessee still continued to be its owner. He contended that
the expression "owner" means the person having the ultimate
right to the property. He further contended that the so
long as the assessee had a right to that 7-L3Sup.C.I./72
property in whatever manner that right might have been
hedged in or restricted, he still continued to be the owner.
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On the other hand, it was contended on behalf of the Revenue
that the Incometax is concerned with income, gains and
profits. Therefore for the purpose of that Act, the owner
is that person who is entitled to the income. According to
the Revenue the word "owner" in s. 9 refers to the legal
ownership and not to any beneficial interest in the
property.
For deciding the question whether the assessee was the owner
of the property for the purpose of S. 9 of the Act during
the relevant accounting years, we have to look to the
provisions of the Ordinance. Let us first take a survey of
the relevant provisions of the Ordinance and thereafter
analyse the effect of those provisions.
The long title of the Ordinance says that it is an Ordinance
to provide for the administration of the evacuee property in
Pakistan and for certain matters incidental thereto. The
preamble says that "whereas an emergency has arisen which
renders it necessary to provide for the administration of
evacuee property in Pakistan and for certain matters
incidental thereto". Section 6(1) provides that all evacuee
property shall vest and shall be deemed always to have
vested in the Custodian with effect from the 1st day of
March 1947. Section 9 gives Dower to the Custodian to take
possession of the evacuee property. Section 11 provides
that any amount due to an evacuee or payable in respect of
any evacuee property, shall be paid to the Custodian by the
person liable to pay the same and the payment to the
Custodian discharges the debtor’s liability to the extent of
the payment made. Section 12 prescribes that the property
which hag vested in or of which possession has been taken by
the Custodian shall be exempt from all legal process,
including seizure, distress, ejectment or sale by any
officer of a Court or any other authority a;; no injunction
or other order of whatever kind in respect of such property
shall be granted or made by any Court or any ot" authority.
Section 14(1) permits the Rehabilitation Authority, allot
evacuee property to the refugees. Section 16(1) says the no
creation or transfer of any right or interest in or
encumbrane, upon any property made in any manner whatsoever
on or after the first day of March, 1947 by or on behalf of
an evacuee or by or on behalf of a person who has or may
become an evacuee after the date of such creation or
transfer, shall be effective so as to confer any right or
remedy on any party thereto or on any person claiming under
any such party, unless it is confirmed by the Custodian.
Section 19 empowers the Custodian to restore the evacuee
property to the lawful owner subject to such conditions as
he may be pleased to impose. Section 20(1) stipulates that
the Custodian may take such measures as he considers
643
necessary or expedient for the purpose of administering,
preserving and managing any evacuee property which has
vested in him and may for any such purpose as aforesaid, do
all acts and incur all expenses necessary or incidental
thereto. Sub-s. (2) of that section provides that "without
Prejudice to the generality of the provisions contained in
sub-s. (1), the Custodian may.
(m)sell any evacuee property,
notwithstanding any this contained in any law
or agreement to the contrary relating thereto,
Provided that the Custodian shall not under
this Clause or the next succeeding clause sell
any immovable evacuee property or any business
or undertaking which is evacuee property,
except with the previous approval of the
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Central Government."
Clause (i) of that sub-section empowers the Custodian to
demolish or dismantle any evacuee property which in his
opinion cannot be repaired, or sell the site of such
property and the materials thereof. The Custodian can
recoup all the expenses incurred by him in the
administration of the evacuee property from out of the
receipts in his hand in respect of that property, Section
22(1) requires the Custodian to maintain separate account of
the property of each evacuee of which he has taken
possession and shall cause to be made therein entries of all
receipts and expenditure in respect therof.
The Ordinance starts by saying that it is an Ordinance to
provide for the administration of evacuee property and not
management of evacuee property. The expression "administra-
tion" in relation to an estate, in law means managements and
settling of that estate. It is a power to deal with the
estate. The evacuee could not take possession of his
property. He could not lease that property. He could not
sell that property without the consent of the Custodian. He
could not mortgage that property. He could not realise the
lncome of the property. On the other hand, the Custodian
could take possession of that property. He could realise
its income. He could alienate the property and he could
under certain circumstances demolish the property. All the
rights that the evacuee had in the property he left in
Pakistan were exercisable by the Custodian excepting that he
could not appropriate the proceeds for his own use. The
evacuee could not exercise any rights in that property
except with the consent of the Custodian. He merely had
some beneficial. interest in that property. No doubt that
residual interest in a sense is ownership. The property
having vested in the Custodian, who bad
644
all the powers of the owner, he was the legal owner or the
property. In the eye of the law, the Custodian was the
owner of that property. The position, of the Custodian was
no less than that of a Trustee. Section 9(1) says :
"The tax shall be payable by an assessee under
the head "Income from Property" in respect of
the bona fide annual value of property
consisting of any buildings or lands
appurtenant thereto of which he is the owner,
other than such portions of such property as
he may occupy for the purposes of any
business, profession or vocation carried on by
him the profits of which are assessable to tax
subject to the following allowances namely :-
The question is who is the "owner" referred to in this
section ? Is it the person in, whom the property vests or
is it he who is entitled to some beneficial interest in the
property It must be remembered that S. 9 brings to tax the
income from property and not the interest of a person in the
property. A property cannot be owned by two persons, each
one having independent and exclusive right over it. Hence
for the purpose of s. 9, the owner must be that person who
can exercise the rights of the owner, not on behalf of the
owner but in his own right.
For a minute, let us look at things from the practical point
of view. If the thousands of evacuees who left practically
all their properties as well as business in Pakistan had
been considered as the owners, of those properties and
business as long as the ’Ordinance’ was in force then those
unfortunate persons would have had to pay income-tax on the
basis of the annual letting value of their properties and on
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the income, gains and profits of the businesses left by them
in Pakistan though they did not get a paisa out of those
properties and businesses. Fortunately no one in the past
interpreted the law in the manner Mr. Mahajan wants us to
interpret. It is time that equitable considerations are
irrelevant in interpreting tax laws. But these laws, like
all other laws have to be interpreted reasonably and in
consonance with justice.
The question as to who is Vie owner of a house property
under s. 9 of the Act in circumstances similar to those
before us came up for consideration before the Calcutta
High Court in the matter of The Official Assignee for
Bengal (Estate of Jnanendra Nath Pramanik) (1). In that
case on the adjudication of a person as insolvent under the
Presidency Towns Insolvency Act, 1909, certain house
property of the insolvent vested in the Official Assignee.
The question arose whether the Official Assignee
(1)5. I.T.R. 233.
645
could be taxed in respect of the income of the property
under s. 9. The High Court held_ that the property did not
by reason of the adjudication of the debtor cease to be a
subject fit for taxation and in view of the provisions of s.
17 of the Presidency Towns Insolvency Act, the Official
Assignee was the, "owner" of the property and he could
rightly be assessed in respect of the income from that
property under s. 9. Section 17 of the, Presidency Towns
Insolvency Act, reads:
"On the making of an order of adjudication,
the property of the insolvent wherever situate
shall vest in the official assignee and shall
became divisible among his creditors, and
thereafter, except as directed by this Act, no
creditor to whom the insolvent is indebted in
respect of any debt provable in insolvency
shall, during the pendency of the insolvency
proceedings, have any remedy against the
property of the insolvent in respect of the
debt: or shall commence any suit or other
legal proceedings except with the leave of the
Court and on such terms as the Court may
impose :
Provided that this section shall not affect
the power of any secured creditor to realize
or otherwise deal with his security in the
same manner, as he would have been entitled to
realise or deal with it if this section had
not been passed."
We may note that the powers of the Custodian are no less
than that of the Official Assignee under the Presidency
Towns Insolvency Act, 1909. Delivering the judgment of the
Court in the Official Assignee’s case(1), Costello, J.
observed :
"With regard to the first point, Mr. Page argued that
although by section 17 of the Presidency Towns Insolvency
Act these properties vested in the Official Assignee he did
not thereby or thereupon become the owner of those
properties within the meaning properly ascribable to that
word for the purposes of the applicability of Section 9.
What Mr. Page really invited us to do was to restrict the
meaning of the word by putting before it the qualifying
adjective "beneficial". What was argued by Mr. Page was
that the Official Assignee had no legal interest in the
properties themselves, they were merely vested in him for
the purposes of the administration of them in the interest
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of the creditors of the insolvent. I am unable to accept
Mr. Page’s contention. In this country there is no
difference between "legal estate" and "equitable estate".
In this connection the case of Sir Currimbhoy Ebrahim Baro-
(1) 5 I.T.R. 233.
646
netcy Trust v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay 612 I.A.
1209) is of assistance. At page 217 Sir Sydney Rowlatt when
giving the judgment of the Privy Council made this
observation: "In their Lordships" opinion the effect of the
Act creating these trusts is not to give the baronet for the
time being any right to any part of the interest or property
specifically or any right which, even granting that the
legal title is not the only thing that can ever be looked
at, would make it true to say that any proportion of the
interest is not ’receivable’ or any proportion of the
property is not ’owned’ by the incorporated trustees."
The learned judges of the Calcutta High Court
in reaching that conclusion relied on the
decision in The Commissioner of Inland Revenue
v. Fleming(1). That appeal related to a claim
for repayment of income-tax to which the
respondent claimed to be entitled in respect
of "personal allowance" introduced into the
Income-tax system by S. 18 of the Finance Act,
1920. The claim arose in the following
circumstances :
The respondent was declared insolvent in 1921.
He was then the owner of heritable properties.
His insolvency lasted till May 10, 1926. When
he received his discharge on payment of
composition and was reinvested in his estate.
At that time his estate consisted of (1) Two
of the original heritable properties which had
not been realised by the trustee in the
insolvency and (2) a balance in cash of pound
53 odd. During the insolvency, the trustee
paid income-tax on the full annual value of
the two properties in question. The
contention of the respondent was that the
radical right to these properties was in him
all that time; and that; in paying the tax,
the trustee was really paying it on his
behalf-that is, on his income-and that
consequently there arose in each of the years
in which the payment was made a right to
deduct his "personal allowance" from the
annual value ’of the properties. The right to
this abatement is said to have passed to the
Respondent himself in virtue of the
reinvestment in his estate which occurred upon
his discharge on composition. Rejecting this
contention Lord President observed :
"It is obvious that, unless during the years
in question the annual value of the properties
was income of the Respondent, he cannot have
any claim to abatement of it for income-tax
purposes; and accordingly everything depends
upon the soundness of the proposition that the
income consisting in the annual value of
(1) 14, Tax Cases 78.
647
these properties was truly income of the
Respondent. I do not see how it can possibly
be so described. It was part of the income
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arising from the sequestrated estates vested
in the trustee for the Respondent’s creditors.
Any income that did arise from those estates
was income of the trustee as such, and he (and
he alone) had the right to put it into his
pocket as income. It was not income that went
or could go into the pocket of the Respondent
as income in any of the years in question.
How then can it be said to have reached his
pocket as income on his subsequent
reinvestiture."
For determining the person liable to pay tax, the test laid
down by the court was to find out the person entitled to
that income. An attempt was made by Mr. Mahajan to
distinguish this case on the ground that under the
corresponding English statute the liability to tax in
respect of income from property is not laid on the owner of
the property. It is true that s. 82 of the English Income-
tax Act, 1952 is worded differently. But the principles
underlying the two statutes are identical. This is clear
from the various provisions in that Act.
The conclusion reached by Costello, J. in Official
Assignee’s case(1) receives support from the decision of the
Privy Council in Trustees of Sir Currimbhoy Ibrahim
Baronetcy Trust v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay(2).
The Counsel for the appellant was unable to point out to us
any decision which has taken a view contrary to that taken
in Official Assignee’s case(3).
The learned judges of the High Court in reaching their con-
clusion that the assessee was not the owner of the property
in the relevant assessment years, took assistance from the
decisions of English courts dealing with the question of
levy of income-tax on the income from enemy properties taken
possession of by the Custodian during war. In those cases
the English judges have enunciated the theory of suspended
ownership. We do not think that we need call assistance
from those decisions.
Mr. Mahajan contended that despite the fact that evacuee
property was taken over by the Custodian and that he had
been conferred with large powers to deal with it, an evacuee
from Pakistan who owned that property before he migrated to
India still continued to be the owner of the property. For
this contention of his he placed reliance on some of the
observations of this Court in Amar Singh v. Custodian,
Evacuee Property, Punjab(1). Therein delivering judgment of
the Court Jagannadhadas, J. observed (at p. 815 of the
report):
(1)5 I.T.R. 233.
(2)2 I. T.R. 148.
(3) [1957] S.C.R.
648
"Stopping here it will be seen that the
position, in its general aspect, is that all
evacuee property is vested in the Custodian.
But the evacuee has not lost his ownership in
it. The law recognised his ultimate ownership
subject to certain limitations. The evacuee
may come back and obtain return of his
property, as also an account of the management
thereof by the Custodian."
Those observations have to be understood in the context in
which they were made. Therein, their Lordships were
considering whether the right of an evacuee in respect of
the property left by him in the country from which he
migrated was property right for the purpose of Art. 19 (1 )
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(1) (f ) of the Constitution. No one denies that an evacuee
from Pakistan has a residual right in the property that he
left in Pakistan. But the real question is, can that right
be considered as ownership within the meaning of S. 9 of the
Act. As mentioned earlier that section seeks to bring to
tax income of the property in the hands of the owner. Hence
the focus of that section is on the receipt of the income.
The word "owner" has different meanings in different
contexts. Under certain circumstances a lessee may be
considered as the owner of the property leased to him. In
Stroud’s Judicial Dictionary (3rd Edn.), various meanings of
the word "owner" are given.’ It is not necessary for our
present purpose to examine what the word "owner" means in
different contexts. The meaning that we give to the word "
owner" in s. 9 must not be such as to make that provision
capable of being made an instrument of oppression. It must
be in consonance with the principles underlying the Act.
Mr. Mahajan next invited our attention to the observations
in Pollock on Jurisprudence (6th Edn. 1929) 178-80: "Owner-
ship may be described as the entirety of the powers of use
and disposal allowed by law... The owner of a thing is not
necessarily the person who at a given time has the whole
power of use and disposal; very often there is no such
person. We must look for the person having the residue of
all such power when we have accounted for every detached and
limited portion of ’it; and he will be the owner even if the
immediate power of control and use is elsewhere".
It is not necessary to consider whether those observations
hold good even now because of the various legislative
measures enacted during the last about forty years after
those observations were made. Suffice it to say that those
observations are inapplicable to the case of the "owner"
under S. 9 of the Act.
649
Mr. Mahajan in support of his contention next placed
reliance on the decision of the Patna High Court in Raja P.
C. Lal Choudhary v. Commissioner of Income-tax(1). Therein
the question was whether the receiver of a property
appointed by court was the owner of the property for the
purpose of s. 9 of the Act. The court came to the
conclusion that he was not the owner as the property did not
vest in him. In fact in the course of the judgment, the
court made a distinction between a receiver and a trustee
and an official assignee. In our opinion this decision
instead of supporting the case of the appellant may lend
some support to the contention of the Revenue.
Reliance was next placed on the decision of the Calcutta
High Court in Nawah Bahadur of Murshidabad v. Commissioner
of Income-tax, West Bengal(2). The facts of that case were
:
Properties which belonged to the ancestors of the Nawab of
Murshidabad as Rulers, were, some time after the territories
had been conquered by the British, settled by the Secretary
of State for India in the year 1891 on the then Nawab of
Murshidabad under a deed of settlement which provided that
such properties " shall henceforth and for ever be held and
enjoyed by the said Nawab Bahadur and such one among his
lineal male heirs as may be successively entitled to hold
the said title in perpetuity,. with and subject to the
incidents, power, limitations and conditions as to the
inalienability and otherwise hereinafter contained". One of
the conditions was that he was not entitled to sell or
alienate the properties except with the approval of the
Governor of Bengal. The Settlement deed was confirmed by
Act XV of 1891. The question arose whet-her Nawab of
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Murshidabad was liable to pay tax in respect of the income
of those properties under s. 9 of the Act. The Court held
that whatever might have been the original nature of the
"State properties, after the deed of settlement and the Act
of 1891, as the dual status of the Nawab as the holder of
the State and as an individual ceased, it could not be said
that the Nawab for the time being was not the "owner" of
such properties for the purposes of s. 9 of the Act and the
Nawab was therefore liable to be assessed to income-tax on
the income of such properties. The Court further held that
the word "owner" in s. 9 of the Act applies to owners of the
whole income, even though they are under certain
restrictions with regard to the alienation of the
properties. We are unable to see how this decision gives
any support to the contentions advanced on behalf of the
assessee.
After giving our careful consideration to the question of
law under consideration, we have come to the conclusion that
the
(1) 16, I.T.R. 123.
(2) 28, I.T.R. 510.
650
assessee was not the owner of Neadous Hotel during the
relevant assessment years for the purpose of s. 9 of the
Act. Hence these appeals fail and they are dismissed. In
the circumstances of the case we make no order as to costs
in these appeals.
G.C.
Appeals dismissed.
651