Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, MADRAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BAGYALAKSHMI & CO., UDAMALPET
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
04/11/1964
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
SHAH, J.C.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 1708 1965 SCR (2) 22
CITATOR INFO :
R 1966 SC1490 (9)
R 1970 SC1343 (17)
R 1971 SC 383 (5)
ACT:
Income Tax-Registration of firm-Members of Hindu undivided
family representing it as partners in firm-Partition of
Hindu undivided family Variance between the interests of the
members as shown in partnership deed and as shown in
partition deed-Partnership otherwise genuine-Whether
registerable-Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 (11 of 1922), s.
26A.
HEADNOTE:
G and his son V belonged to a Hindu undivided family, and as
representatives of the family were partners in the assesee-
firm holding therein shares of 71 as. and 2 1/2 as.
respectively. The family thus held through them, an
interest of 10 as. in the assessee-firm. On August 24,
1950, there was a partition in the family, and according to
the partition-deed the 10 as. interest of the family in the
assessee-firm was divided in such a way between seven
members that the shares allotted to G and V came to 2 as.
and 1 anna 4 pies respectively. On November 30, 1950, a new
partnership-deed was drawn up by the partners of the
assessee-firm and the shares allotted to G and V therein
were again 7 1/2 as. and 21 as. respectively. The claim of
the assessee-firm for Registration under s. 26-A of the
Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, on the basis of the new deed,
for the years 1952-53, 1953-54 and 1954-55 was accepted by
the Income-tax authorities. G and V were duly assessed on
their respective shares as shown in the partnership deed.
But they contended that in respect of the first two years
they were liable to pay tax only in respect of their
respective shares as shown in the partition-deed of their
erstwhile undivided family. Their contention was accepted
by the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal. Whereupon, the
Commissioner of Income-tax acting under s. 33B of the afore-
said Act cancelled the registration of the partnership for
the three years on the ground that the partnership-deed did
not show the correct shares of the partners in the
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partnership. The Tribunal, in appeal, upheld the Commis-
sioner’s action. At the assessee’s instance, a reference
was then made to the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad,
the questions referred being whether the Commissioner’s
action under s. 33B was lawful, and if so, whether the firm
was registerable under s. 26A for the assessment years in
question. The High Court decided both the questions in
favour of the assesee and against the Revenue. The
Commissioner of Income-tax appealed to this court.
It was contended on behalf of the Revenue that as the
partnership-deed did not specify the correct shares of G and
V in that while they were entitled only to 2 as. and 1 anna
4 pies share in accordance, with the partition-deed, they
were shown in the partnership-deed as holding 7 1/2 as. and
2 1/2 as. shares respectively, and therefore, the Tribunal
had rightly held that the said partnership could not be
registered under s. 26A of the Act.
HELD : A contract of partnership has no concern with the
obligation of the partners to others in respect of their
shares of profit in the partnership. It only regulates the
rights and liabilities of the partners. A partner may be
the karta of a joint Hindu family, he may be a trustee; he
may enter into sub-partnership with others; he may under an
agreement express or implied, be the representative of a
group of persons; he may be a benamidar for another. In all
such cases he occupies a dual position. Qua
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the partnership he functions in his personal capacity; qua
the third parties, in his representative capacity. Third
parties, whom one of the partner represents, cannot enforce
their rights against the other partners nor can the other
partners do so against the said third parties. Their right
is only to a share in the profits of their partner-
representative in accordance with law or in accordance with
the terms of the agreement, as the case may be. [26 E-G]
The law of partnership and Hindu law functions in different
fields. A divided member or some of the divided members of
an erstwhile joint family can certainly enter into a
partnership with third parties under some arrangement among
the members of the divided family. Their shares in the
partnership depend on the terms of the partnership; the
shares of the members of the divided family in the interest
of their representative in the partnership depend upon the
terms of the partition deed. [28 D-E]
The High Court had given correct answers to the questions
propounded. As the partnership-deed was genuine, the shares
given to G and V in the said partnership were correct in
accordance with the terms of the partnership deed. [28 F]
Commissioner of Income-tax, Ahmedabad v. M/s. A.. Abdul
Rahim & Co. [1965] 2 S.C.R. 12, referred to.
Charandas Haridas v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay,
[1960] 3 S.C.R. 296, relied on.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos. 1099-1101
of 1963.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment dated January 24,
1961 of the Madras High Court in R.C. No. 143 of 1956.
C. K. Daphtary, Attorney-General, N. D. Karkhanis and R.
N. Sachthey, for the appellant.
S. Sivaminathan and R. Gopalakrishnan, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Subba Rao, J. These appeals raise, though not the same but a
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similar question on which we have given a decision in The
Com missioner of Income-tax, Ahmedabad v. M/s. A. Abdul
Rahim & Co.(5). The assessee-firm was the Managing Agents of
Palani Andavar Mills Ltd., Udamalpet. It was originally
constituted by a deed of partnership, dated June 1, 1934.
The following 6 persons were the partners :
(1) G. Venkataswami Naidu As. 2
(2) G. T. Narayanaswamy Naidu As. 2
(3) G. T. Krishnaswamy Naidu As. 2
(4) M. A. Palaniappa Chettiar As. 5
(5) R. Guruswamy Naidu As. 2 1/2
(6) K. Venkatasubba Naidu As. 21
By subsequent transactions the share of G. Venkataswami
Naidu
(1) [1965]2S.C.R. 12.
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was transferred to his son Vidyasagar and the share of M. A.
Palaniappa Chettiar was purchased by R. Guruswamy Naidu.
With the result that the 5th partner, G. Guruswamy, had 7
1/2 annas share in the partnership instead of 2 1/2 annas
share which he held earlier. Guruswamy Naidu and
Venkatasubba Naidu, the 5th and 6th partners, belonged to a
Hindu undivided family and the beneficial interest of their
shares belonged to that family; indeed, during the previous
years the joint family was assessed in respect of the income
pertaining to the said shares. On August 24, 1950, the said
Hindu undivided family was divided and a partition deed was
executed between the members thereof. Under the deed the
ten annas share held by the family was divided as follows :
(1) R. Guruswamy Naidu As.2
(2) Rudrappa (Minor son of No. 1) Anna 1
(3) Venkataramana
(Minor son of No. 1) Anna 1
(4) Subba Naidu As. 2
(5) Venkatasubba Naidu As. 1-4
(6) Rudrappa Naidu As. 1-4
(7) Jagannatha Naidu As. 1-4
After the said partition, on November 30, 1950, a new
pertner-ship deed was executed between the partners of the
assessee-firm. Under the said partnership deed the following
shares were allotted to each of the partners :
(1) R. Guruswamy Naidu As. 71
(2) R. Venkatasubba Naidu As. 21
(3) G. T. Narayanaswamy Naidu As. 2
(4) G. T. Krishnaswamy Naidu As. 2
(5) Vidyasagar As. 2
The point to be noticed is that the beneficial interest in
10 annas share originally belonged to the Hindu undivided
family of which Guruswamy Naidu and Venkatasubba Naidu were
members. But before and after the partition of the joint
family the said two persons, namely, Guruswamy Naidu and
Venkatasubba Naidu, were partners of the firm; before the
partition the beneficial interest in the 10 annas share was
in the undivided family, but after partition the beneficial
interest in the partnership was in the divided members of
the family including the said two partners. The assessee-
firm presented the deed of partnership, dated November 30,
1950, before the Income-tax Officer for registration for the
assessment years 1952-53, 1953-54 and 1954-55 and was duly
registered under s. 26A of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922,
here-
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in after called the Act. In due course Guruswamy Naidu and
Venkatasubba Naidu were assessed as partners of the
assessee-firm on their respective shares as shown in the
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partnership deed. But the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal, in
respect of two of the assessments made on them, accepted
their contention and held that they were liable only to pay
tax in respect of the shares shown in the partition deed.
After the decision of the Tribunal, the Commissioner of
Income-tax acting under s. 33B of the Act cancelled the
registration of the partnership on the ground that the
partnership deed did not show the correct shares of the
partners in the partnership. On appeal, the Appellate
Tribunal confirmed the order of the Commissioner in respect
of the 3 assessment years. At the instance of the assessee-
firm the following questions of law were referred to the
High Court.
(1) Whether the aforesaid order of the
Commissioner under s. 33B cancelling the
registration of the firm for the three years
1952-53, 1953-54 and 1954-55 is lawful.
(2) If the answer to the above question is
in the affirmative, whether the firm is
registrable under s. 26-A for the aforesaid
assessment years.
A Division Bench of the Madras High Court, which heard the
reference, came to the conclusion that the partnership was a
genuine one, that the partition in the joint Hindu family
allotting specific shares to the members of the family might
have affected the accountability of the two partners of the
firm to the other members of the family, but qua the
partnership their relationship with the other partners had
not in any way been affected and, therefore, the Tribunal
went wrong in holding that the registration of the said
partnership was rightly refused. In the result, it answered
the first question in the negative and the second question
in the affirmative. Hence the appeals.
Learned Attorney-General, appearing for the Revenue, con-
tended that as the partnership deed did not specify the
correct shares of Guruswamy Naidu and Venkatasubba Naidu in
that while they were entitled only to 2 annas and 1 anna 4
pies share in accordance with the partition deed, they were
shown in the partnership deed as holding 71 annas and 2 1/2
annas shares respectively and, therefore, the Tribunal
rightly held that the said partnership could not be
registered under s. 26A of the Act.
Mr. Swaminathan, learned counsel for the respondent con-
tended that the partition of the family’s beneficial
interest in the Sup./65- 3
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partnership business has no relevance to the question of
registration of the partnership under the Act, for,
according to him, the authorities are only concerned with
the validity and genuineness of the partnership deed
executed by the partners thereof and not with the dealings
of any one of the partners in respect of his share with
third parties.
We have held in The Commissioner of Income-tax, Ahmedabad v.
M/s. A. Abdul Rahim & Co., Baroda(1) that the Income-tax
Officer can reject the registration of a firm if it is not
genuine or valid and if. the application for registration
has not complied with the rules made under the Act. Here we
have admittedly a genuine partnership. It cannot even be
suggested that it is invalid. The only objection is that
Guruswamy Naidu and Venkatasubba Naidu have less shares in
the partition deed than those shown in the partnership deed.
If the distinction between three concepts is borne in mind
much of the confusion disappears. A partnership is a
creature of contract. Under Hindu law a joint family is one
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of status and right to partition is one of its incidents.
The Income-tax law gives the Income-tax Officer a power to
assess the income of. a person in the manner provided by the
Act. Except where there is a specific provision of the
Income-tax Act which derogates from any other statutory law
or personal law, the provisions win have to be considered in
the light of the relevant branches of law. A contract of
partnership has no concern with the obligation of the
partners to others in respect of their shares of profit in
the partnership. It only regulates the rights and
liabilities of the partners. A partner may be the karta of
a joint Hindu family; he may be a trustee; he may enter into
a sub-partnership with others; he may, under an agreement,
express or implied. be the representative of a group of
persons; he may be a benamidar for another. In all such
cases he occupies a dual position. Qua the partnership he
functions in his personal capacity; qua the third parties,
in his representative capacity. The third parties, whom one
of the partners represents, cannot enforce their rights
against the other partners nor the other partners can do so
against the said third pat-ties. Their right is only to a
share in the profits of their partnerrepresentative in
accordance with law or in accordance with the terms of the
agreement, as the case may be. If that be so, Guruswamy
Naidu could have validly entered into a genuine partnership
with others taking a 10 annas share in the business, though
in fact as between the members of the family he has only a 2
annas share therein. He would have been answerable for the
profits per-
(1)[1965] 2 S.C.R. 12.
27
taining to his share to the divided members of the family,
but it would not have affected the validity or genuineness
of the partnership. So much is conceded by the learned
Attorney-General. If so, we do not see why a different
result should flow if instead of one member of the divided
family two members thereof under some arrangement between
the said members of the family took 10 annas share in the
partnership. If the contention of the Revenue was of no
avail in the case of representation by a single member, it
could not also have any validity in the case where two
members represented the divided members of the family in the
partnership. As the partnership deed was genuine, it must
be held that the shares given to Guruswamy Naidu and
Venkatasubba Naidu in the said partnership are correct in
accordance with the terms of the partnership deed.
This Court in Charandas Haridas v. Commissioner of Income-
tax, Bombay(1) had to consider a converse position. There a
karta of a Hindu undivided family was a partner in 6
managing agency firms and the share of the managing agency
commission received by him as such partner being assessed as
the income of the family. Thereafter, there was a partial
partition in the family by which he gave his daughter a one
pie share of the commission from each of two of the managing
agencies and the balance in those agencies and the
commission in the other four managing agencies were divided
into five equal shares between himself, his wife and three
minor sons. The memorandum of partition recited that the
parties had decided that commission which accrued from
January 1, 1946, ceased to the joint family property and
that each became absolute owner of his share.
Notwithstanding the partition, the Income-tax authorities
assessed the said total income as the income of the joint
family. The Bombay High Court agreed with that view. But
this Court held that as the partition document was a genuine
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one, it was fully effective between the members of the
family and therefore the income in respect of the divided
property was not the income of the Hindu joint family. In
that context Hidayatullah J., speaking for the Court, made
the following observations :
"The fact of a partition in the Hindu law may
have no effect upon the position of the
partner, insofar as the law of partnership is
concerned, but it has fall effect upon the
family insofar as the Hindu law is concerned.
Just as the fact of a karta becoming a partner
does not introduce the members of the
undivided family into the partnership, the
division of the family does not change
(1) [1960] 3 S.C.R. 296.
28
the position of the partner vis-a-vis the
other partner or partners. The Income-tax law
before the partition takes note, factually, of
the position of the karta, and assesses not
him qua partner but as representing the Hindu
undivided family. In doing so, the Income-tax
law looks not to the provisions of the
Partnership Act, but to the provisions of
Hindu law. When once the family has dis-
rupted, the position under the partnership
continues as before, but the position under
the Hindu law changes. There is then no Hindu
undivided family as a unit of assessment in
point of fact, and the income which accrues
cannot be said to be of a Hindu undivided
family. There is nothing in the Indian
Income-tax law or the law of partnership which
prevents the members of a Hindu joint family
from dividing any asset."
These observations support the conclusion we have arrived
at. The division in the joint family does not change the
position of the karta as a partner vis-a-vis the other
partner or partners in a preexisting partnership, because
the law of partnership and Hindu law function in different
fields. If so, on the same principle a divided member or
some of the divided members of an erstwhile joint family can
certainly enter into a partnership with third parties under
some arrangement among the members of the divided family.
Their shares in the partnership depends upon the terms of
the partnership; the shares of the members of the divided
family in the interest of their representative in the
partnership depends upon the terms of the partition deed.
For the aforesaid reasons, we hold that the High Court has
given correct answers to the question propounded.
In the result, the appeals fail and are dismissed with
costs. One hearing fee.
Appeals dismissed.
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