Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF EXPENDITURE-TAX, GUJARAT,AHMEDABAD
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DARSHAN SURENDRA PAREKH
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
12/12/1967
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
RAMASWAMI, V.
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
CITATION:
1968 AIR 1125 1968 SCR (2) 589
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1991 SC1289 (16)
ACT:
Expenditure Tax Act (29 of 1957), ss. 2(g) and 4-Assessee a
Hindu undivided family-Karta, if dependant of assessee-
Expenditure by trustees on behalf of children of karta-
Whether liable to be included under s. 4(i) or (ii).
HEADNOTE:
Section 4(i) of the Expenditure Tax Act, 1957, is intended
to include in the taxable expenditure of an assessee, the
expenditure incurred directly or indirectly by a person
other than the assessee for discharging any obligation of
the assessee, or for the personal requirement of the
assessee or of any of the assessee’s dependents, which, but
for the expenditure havingbeen incurred by that other
person would have been incurred by thesee; and, s. 4(ii)
is intended to include any expenditure incurred byany
dependent of the assessee for the benefit of the assessee or
of any of his dependents out of any settlement on trust or
other source made or created by the assessee.
A Hindu, his children by his first wife, his second wife,
and children by her, formed a Hindu undivided family, with
himself as the karta. By deeds of trust he settled certain
assets belonging to the joint family in favour of the
children by the first wife and appointed trustees to manage
the assets, to collect the income and to defray the expenses
of the children. The karta was also possessed of separate
property. In computing the taxable expenditure of the
assessee-family for the years 1958-59 and 1959-60, under the
Expenditure Tax Act, the department included two items : (1)
the expenditure incurred by the karta, out of his own
separate property for his own purposes; and (2) the sum
spent out of the trust estate for the children. On a
reference, the High Court held that the two items were not
chargeable to tax.
In appeal to this Court it was contended that the first item
was liable to be included in the expenditure of the assessee
family under s 4(i) because, the karta in a Hindu undivided
family is a ’dependent’ and the expenditure incurred was by
a person other than the assessee for the personal
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requirement of a ’dependent’ and the family would have been
liable to meet the expenditure if it were not incurred by
the Karta, and the second, either under s. 4(i) or (ii).
HELD : (1) The expression ’other member of the family’ in s.
2(g) (H) (b) does not include a coparcener : it means wives
and unmarried daughters of coparceners and widows of the
family. A karta, is expressly excluded from cl. (a) and is
not within the expression ’other member of the family’ in
cl. (b). Therefore, the karta is not a ’dependent’. The
facts that when a karta incurs expenditure for the
coparceners or other members out of his separate estate the
expenditure is liable to be included in the taxable
expenditure of the family, and that the expenditure incurred
by a coparcener or other member of family out of his
separate property in respect of the obligations of the
family, or for the personal requirements of the coparceners
or other members of the family, is also liable to
590
,be included in the taxable expenditure of the family, are
not grounds for attributing to the expression ’dependent’ a
wholly artificial meaning different from its statutory
definition. There is nothing in the scheme of the Act which
suggests that the expression ’dependent’ in s. 4(1) of the
Act was used in a sense different from that of the
definition. No rule of interpretation permits, for the
purpose of s. 4(i) of the Act, the application of the
statutory definition of ’dependent’ to bring within the net
of taxation, expenditure incurred for coparceners other than
the karta, and of .a special meaning of that expression,
inconsistent alike with the personal law of the parties, and
the statutory definition, to bring within the net of
taxation, the expenditure for the karta. The Court cannot
attribute two different meanings to a single expression in
its application to two different situations contemplated by
a single clause. [593 H; 594 C-D, F; 595 C-E; 596 B-C]
For the year 19591-60, s.4(i) was amended by the deletion of
the words ’which but for the expenditure having been
incurred by that other person, would have been incurred by
the asses-see’. But these words were a surplusage : by
deleting them no intention to alter the ’meaning of the
original clause (i) could be, attributed to the Legislature
[598 E-F]
Therefore, for both the years, the expenditure incurred by
the karta out of his separate property for his own purposes
could not be taken into account in computing the taxable
expenditure of the assessee-family, even if the family would
have been liable to incur that expenditure [596 F]
(2)The Appellate Tribunal found that as regards the
children of the karta, the trustees ’had paid, spent or
applied the income. If the finding meant that the trustees
incurred the expenditure for necessary expenses of the
children, the case would fall under s. 4(i) for, the
expenditure would be deemed to be incurred by a person other
than the assesseefamily for discharging an obligation of the
family. If it meant that the ,expenditure was incurred by
or on behalf of the children after it was received from the
trustees, the case would fall under cl. (ii). ’no trusts
were created by the karta out of the family funds; the
children were dependants within the meaning of s. 2(g); and
the expenditure was incurred for the benefit of the
dependents of the family. The High Court was in error in
observing that the expenditure contemplated by s. 4(ii) is
one which enures for the benefit of a person other than the
person who incurs the expenditure. If expenditure was
incurred by a dependent for his own benefit out of any gift,
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donation or settlement on trust or out of any other source
made or created by the undivided family, the case falls
within the terms of s. 4(ii). [597 B-F]
For the year 19,59-60, the Legislature amended s.4(ii) and
expressly provided that where the assessee is a Hindu
undivided family, any expenditure, incurred by any dependent
of the assessee from or out of any income or property
transferred directly or indirectly to the dependent by the
assessee, is liable to be included in the taxable
expenditure of the assessee. Thus the dependent who incurs
the expenditure need not be other than the dependent to whom
the property is transferred by the assessee, and, the
expenditure incurred for his own purposes by the defendant
to whom the property is transferred by the assessee-family
falls within s.4(ii) as amended. Therefore, if the amount
expended from out of the trust estate be held to be expended
by the trustees, the case -falls within the terms of cl.
(i): if it be held that the expenditure was incurred by or
on behalf of the children after the income was received from
the trustees it would fall within the amended cl. (ii). [598
F-H; 599 A-B]
591
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 2523
and 2524 of 1966.
Appeals from the judgment and order dated October 26, 1964
of the Gujarat High Court in Expenditure Tax Reference No. 1
of 1963.
B.Sen, R. N. Sachthey and S. P. Nayar, for the appellant (in
both the appeals).
S.T. Desai and I. N. Shroff, for the respondent (in both the
appeals).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shah, J. One Surendra had by his wife Rameshchandrika (who
died in 1947) three children-Darshan, Ranna and Rajeshri.
By his second wife Pratima he had two sons and one daughter.
Surendra, his wife Pratima and his children formed a Hindu
undivided family. Surendra executed three deeds settling
certain assets belonging to the Hindu undivided family in
favour of his children Darshan, Ranna and Rajeshri, and
appointed trustees to manage the assets and to collect the
income arising therefrom. The three children also owned
some property which they had inherited from their mother.
Separate books of account were maintained in respect of the
two sets of properties and of income received therefrom.
Surendra was also possessed of separate property.
Expenditure for the education of the three children was, it
appears, defrayed out of the income received from the trust
estates.
In a proceeding for assessment of tax under the Expenditure-
tax Act, 1957, of the Hindu undivided family for the
assessment year 1958-59 the Expenditure Tax Officer brought
to tax Rs. 20,508/- being the aggregate of the following
heads of expenditure less the basic allowance of Rs.
30,000/- :
Rs. 11,504/-Expenditure of the Hindu undivided family;
Rs. 10,321/- Expenditure for the minors out of the
separate properties;
Rs. 28,683/- Expenditure incurred by Surendra
out of his separate property.
The order of the Tax Officer was confirmed by the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner and the Appellate Tribunal.
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The Tribunal referred to the High Court of Gujarat under s.
25(1) of the Act, three questions, out of which only two
survive for consideration:
"1. Whether on the facts of the case,, in
computing the taxable expenditure of the
assessee H.P.F. the sum
592
of Rs. 28,683/- being the expenditure
incurred by Shri Surendra, the Karta of the
H.U.F. out of his own self acquired and
separate property was includible in law ?
2. Whether on the facts of the case in
computing the taxable expenditure of the
assessee H.U.F. the sum of Rs. 10,321/- being
the amount spent by the trustees was
includible in law?"
The High Court answered the two questions in favour of the
assessee. Appeal No. 2523 of 1966 arises out of that order.
The relevant provisions of the Act may be briefly noticed.
Clause (c) of S. 2 defines an "assessee" as meaning "an
individual or a Hindu undivided family by whom expenditure-
tax or any other sum of money is payable under this Act, and
includes every individual or Hindu undivided family against
whom any proceeding under this Act has been taken for the
assessment of his expenditure". Section 2(g) defines
"dependent" as meaning "(i) where the assessee is an
individual, his or, her spouse or child wholly or mainly
dependent on the assessee for support and maintenance; (ii)
where the assessee is a Hindu undivided family -(a) every
coparcerner other than the karta; and (b) any other member
of the family who under any law or order or decree of a
court, is entitled to maintenance from the joint family
property". Section 2(h) defines "expenditure" as meaning
"any sum in money or money’s worth, spent or disbursed or
for the spending or disbursing of which a liability has been
incurred by an assessee, and includes any amount which under
the provisions of this Act is required to be included in the
taxable expenditure". Section 3 which imposes the charge of
expenditure-tax provides
"Subject to the other provisions contained in
this Act, there shall be charged for every
financial year commencing on and from the
first day of April, 1958, a tax (hereinafter
referred to as expenditure-tax) at the rate or
rates specified in the Schedule in respect of
the expenditure incurred by any individual or
Hindu undivided family in the previous year:
Provided
Section 4 deals with the amount to be included in the
taxable expenditure. The section as applicable to the year
of assessment 1958-59 read as follows
"Unless otherwise provided in section 5, the
following amounts shall be included in
computing the expenditure of an assessee
liable to tax under this Act, namely
593
(i) any expenditure incurred, whether
directly or indirectly by any person other
than the assessee in respect of any obligation
or personal requirement of the assessee or any
of his dependents which, but for the
expenditure having been incurred by that other
person, would have been incurred by the
assessee, to the extent to which the amount of
all such expenditure in the aggregate exceeds
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Rs. 5,000/- in any year;
(ii) any expenditure incurred by any
dependants of the assessee for the benefit of
the assessee or of any of his dependants out
of any gift, donation or settlement on trust
or out of any other source made or created by
the assessee, whether directly or indirectly.
Explanation.-
Section 5 sets out certain exemptions and s. 6 sets out
certain deductions in the computation of taxable
expenditure. In computing the taxable expenditure of an
assessee under the Act, the expenditure actually incurred by
an assessee is increased by certain specific items of
expenditure incurred by persons other than the assessee, and
reduced by the amounts exempted under s. 5 or permitted to
be deducted under s. 6 of the Act.
The dispute in the appeal relates to the inclusion of the
expenditure incurred by Surendra out of his separate estate,
and the expenditure incurred out of the estate beneficially
vested in his children under the deeds of trust. The Tax
Officer brought to tax the first item under s. 4 (i) read
with cl. (ii) (b) of s. 2 (g), and the second item under s.
4(ii) of the Act. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner and
the Tribunal were of the view that both the items were
chargeable to tax under s. 4 (i) of the Act. The High Court
held that the two items were not chargeable to tax.
Counsel for the Revenue contended that a karta in a Hindu
undivided family is a "dependant", and any expenditure
incurred by the karta even out of his separate estate for
his own needs or pleasures is expenditure incurred by a
person other than the assessee for the personal requirement
of a dependant, and is liable to be included in the taxable
expenditure of the Hindu undivided family under s. 4(i) of
the Act.
In the definition of the expression--"Dependant" in s. 2(g)
(ii)(b) the expression "other member of the family" does not
include a coparcener: it means wives and unmarried daughters
of coparceners and widows in the family. A karta of a Hindu
family being expressly excluded from cl. (a), he is not
within
2Sup. CI/68-- 8
594
the meaning of cl. (b) "other member of the family". To in-
clude him in the expression "other member of the family"
would make the exclusion of the karta in cl. (a)
meaningless. A karta of a Hindu undivided family is
therefore not a "dependant" within the meaning of S. 2(g)
(ii) of the Act.
Under the Act a Hindu undivided family is a taxable entity
distinct from its coparceners and other members. A
coparcener or other member of a Hindu undivided family is
for purposes of assessment of the family to expenditure-tax
a person other than the assessee. Expenditure incurred out
of the family estate, by the karta for and on behalf of the
family is undoubtedly expenditure by the Hindu undivided
family and taxable accordingly. Expenditure incurred by a
coparcener or other member of the family out of his separate
property is liable to be included in the taxable expenditure
of the family, only if it is incurred in respect of the
obligations of the family, or for the personal requirements
of the coparceners or other members of the family, which if
not incurred would have been incurred by the family. But
every item of expenditure incurred by a corparcener or other
member of the .Hindu undivided family for his own purposes
out of his separate property is not expenditure in respect
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of an obligation of the Hindu undivided family; nor is it
expenditure to meet the personal requirements of the
coparceners or other members of the family. For an item to
be included under S. 4(i) within the taxable expenditure of
a Hindu undivided family, it must be incurred for the
collective obligation of the family, or for the separate
personal requirements of the coparceners or other members of
the family in their capacity as members of the family The
karta of a Hindu undivided family assessed to tax under the
Expenditure-tax Act is by the express words of S.
2(g)(ii)(b). not a dependant, and when expenditure is
incurred by a karta out of his separate estate for his own
purposes, even though the family would have been liable to
meet that expenditure if the expenditure were not incurred,
the expenditure will, prima facie, not be liable to be
included in the taxable expenditure of the family.
Counsel for the Revenue contended that the Parliament could
not have intended, in the computation of the taxable
expenditure of a Hindu undivided family, to exclude the
expenditure for the personal requirement of the karta, when
expenditure for the personal requirement of other
coparceners and members of the family is liable to be
included. He submitted that the distinction between
expenditure for personal requirement of the karta and ,of
other coparceners of the family, from property not belonging
to the family is based on no rational principle, and on that
account the definition of dependant in S. 2(g) must be held
595
inapplicable in the interpretation of the Act. Undoubtedly
the definitions in s. 2 of words and expressions used in the
Act apply unless the context otherwise requires, and if the
context in s. 4 requires that the expression " dependant"
should not be given the meaning which is assigned thereto by
the definition in cl. (g) of s. 2, the Court would be
justified in discarding that definition. It is a settled
rule of interpretation that in arriving at the true meaning
which is assigned thereto by the definition in cl. (g) of to
be viewed isolated from its context; it must be viewed in
its whole context, the title, the preamble and all the other
enacting parts of the statute. It follows therefrom that
all statutory definitions must be read subject to the
qualifications expressed in the definition clauses which
create them, such as "unless the context otherwise
requires"; or "unless a contrary intention appears"; or "if
not inconsistent with the context or subject-matter". But
there is nothing in the scheme of the Act which suggests
that the expression "dependant" in s. 4(i) of the Act was
used in a different sense. Section 4(i) is intended to
include expenditure incurred directly or indirectly by a
person other than the assessee for discharging any
obligation or for personal requirement of the assessee or
dependant of the assessee. The clause applies in the
computation of the expenditure of an individual as well as a
Hindu undivided family. It is not claimed that the
definition in s. 2 (g) (i) does not apply to the computation
of the taxable expenditure under s. 4 of an individual
assessee : it is only contended that a part of the
definition in s. 2 (g) (ii) does not apply to the
interpretation of s. 4 (i). When a karta of a Hindu
undivided family incurs expenditure out of the joint family
property to discharge an obligation of the family the
expenditure is clearly by the Hindu undivided family, for in
that case the karta must be deemed to be acting in incurring
the expenditure for and on behalf of the Hindu undivided
family. When the karta incurs expenditure for the
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coparceners or other members out of his separate estate and
for that expenditure the family would have been liable if it
had not been incurred, the expenditure will be included in
the taxable expenditure of the family. But when the
expenditure is incurred by the karta out of his separate
estate for his personal requirements it will not be included
even if the family would have been liable to incur that
expenditure if it had not been incurred. This may apparent-
ly be anomalous. But that is not a ground for attributing
to the expression "dependent" a wholly artificial meaning
different from its statutory definition. No coparcener in a
Hindu undivided family is a dependant of the family: he is
an owner of the entire property of the family in common with
the other coparceners. His rights arise on birth into the
family, and so long as the family remains joint, his
interest in the property is no whit less than the interest
of any other coparcener.
596
The Parliament in devising a special definition of the
expression "dependant" has included therein all coparceners
except the karta. If it be that the definition given in s.
2 (g) is not to apply in interpreting s. 4 of the Act,
expenditure incurred for the personal requirements of all
the coparceners would have to be excluded. But that is not
the contention of the revenue. No rule of interpretation
permits for the purpose of S. 4(i) of the Act the
application of the statutory definition of "dependant" to
bring within the net of taxation, expenditure incurred for
coparceners other than the karta, and of a special meaning
of that expression inconsistent alike with the personal law
of the parties, and the statutory definition to bring within
the net the expenditure for the karta. The Court cannot
attribute two different meanings to a single expression in
its application to two different situations contemplated by
a single clause. The case is one clearly of defective
draftsmanship. In ss. 5 & 6 wherever it was thought
necessary, having regard to the special relation between
members of a Hindu undivided family, the Parliament has
restricted the use of the expression "dependant" to
individual assessees, and has used different phraseology in
defining exclusions and deductions in computing the taxable
expenditure of assessees : see s. 5 (r); s. 6(c)(ii); s.
6(f)(ii); S. 6(g) and s. 6(h). In s. 4, however, the
Parliament has in seeking to attain undue brevity failed to
make provision for inclusion in computing the ,taxable
expenditure of a Hindu undivided family expenditure incurred
by the karta out of his separate estate, which expenditure
would have been incurred by the family if it was not
incurred by the karta.
Expenditure incurred by Surendra out of his separate pro-
perty cannot therefore be taken into account in computing
the taxable expenditure of the Hindu undivided family, in
the absence of a finding that expenditure was incurred
either for the obligation of the family, or for the personal
requirements of the other coparceners or members of the
family, which would have been incurred by the family if it
had not been incurred by Surendra.
The amount of Rs. 10,321/- consists of two components
expenditure incurred out of the trust estate of the children
of Surendra, and out of their personal estate. It is not
clear from the finding recorded by the Tribunal whether the
expenditure was incur-red by the children of Surendra from
the income received from the trust estate, or whether it was
incurred on behalf of the children by the trustees. Clause
2(b) which is common to all the three deeds of trust
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provides that the trustees shall ,,pay, spend or apply the
residue of the trust income to and after the beneficiary
until the beneficiary attain the age of twenty-one
597
years for or towards the maintenance, education, advancement
in life, religious ceremonies, marriage, welfare and benefit
of the beneficiary in such manner as the trustees shall in
their absolute and uncontrolled discretion deem fit." The
Tribunal has in the statement of the case stated that in
accordance with the terms of the trust settlement, the
"trustees had paid, spent or applied the income in the
account year 1957." That finding of the Tribunal is vague.
But the position in law in any one of the three alternatives
is plain. If the trustees incurred the expenditure for the
education, maintenance, advancement in life. or for
religious ceremonies, the case would clearly fall within the
terms of s. 4 (i), for there can be no doubt that the ex-
penditure would be deemed to be incurred by a person other
than the assessee the Hindu undivided family, for the
dependants to discharge obligation which the family was
bound to discharge. If it be held that the expenditure was
incurred by or on behalf of the children after it was
received from the trustees, the case, in our judgment,
would, even if it be assumed that it does not fall within
cl. (i), fall within the terms of cl. (ii). The trusts were
created by Surendra out of the family funds; the children
were dependants within the meaning of s. 2(g); and the
expenditure was incurred for the benefit of the dependants
of the family. We arc unable to agree with the High Court
that the dependant who incurs expenditure, to bring the case
within the terms of s. 4(ii), must be other than the
dependant who obtains the benefit of that expenditure. In
our view, the High Court was in error in observing that the
expenditure contemplated under cl. (ii) of s. 4 is one which
enures for the benefit of a person other than the person who
incurs the expenditure. If expenditure was incurred by a
dependant for his own purposes or benefit out of any gift,
donation or settlement on trust or out of any other source
made or created by the Hindu undivided, family, the case
clearly fell within the terms of s. 4(ii) before the clause
was amended by the Finance Act, 1959. There is nothing in
the Act to show that the application of the clause was
restricted to cases in which the dependant incurred
expenditure for another dependant.
Turning now to Civil Appeal No. 2524 of 1966 which arises
out of the reference to the High Court on two questions
framed in language identical with the language of the
questions in the main appeal, but with different amounts of
expenditure relating to the assessment year 1959-60, it is
unnecessary to set out the different components of the
taxable expenditure incurred by the Hindu undivided family,
expenditure incurred from the trust estate, and the
expenditure incurred by Surendra in his individual capacity.
The questions raised are only about
598
the liability to tax: the figures are not in dispute.
Section 4, as it stood in the year of assessment 1959-60
read as follows:
"Unless otherwise provided in section 5, the
following amount shall be included in
computing the expenditure of an assessee
liable to tax under this Act, namely :-
(i) any expenditure incurred, whether
directly or indirectly by any person other
than the assessee in respect of any obligation
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or personal requirement of the assessee or any
of his dependants, to the extent to which the
amount of all such expenditure in the
aggregate exceeds Rs. 5,0001in any year;
(ii) where the assessee is an individual, any
expenditure incurred by any dependent of the
assessee, and where the assessee is a Hindu
undivided family, expenditure incurred by any
dependant from or out of any income or
property transferred directly or indirectly to
the dependant by the assessee."
Clause (i) is a reproduction of the original clause, subject
the deletion of the words "which but for the expenditure
having been incurred by that other person, would have been
incurred by the assessee." In our view, the words which were
deleted did not add to the meaning of the expression
"obligation or personal requirement of the assessee or any
of his dependants". Expenditure which was not related to
any obligation or personal requirement of the dependants in
their capacity as dependants did not fall within the terms
of s. 4(i) before it was amended. The words to which we
have already referred, were a surplusage: by deleting them
no intention to alter the meaning of the original cl. (i)
may be attributed to the Legislature.
We are of the view, for the reasons already set out in
dealing with the assessment year 1958-59, that the
expenditure incurred by Surendra out of his personal estate
is not liable to be included in the taxable expenditure for
the year 1959-60. If the amount expended from out of the
trust estate be held, for reasons already set out to be
expended by the trustees, the case falls within the terms of
cl. (i): if it be held that the expenditure was incurred by
or on behalf of the children after the income was received
from the trustees it would fall within cl. (ii). The
Legislature has by the amended clause (ii) expressly
provided that where the assessee is a Hindu undivided
family, any expenditure incurred by any dependant of the
assessee from or out of any income or property transferred
directly or indirectly to the depen-
599
dant by the assessee, is liable to be included. The words
are not susceptible of the interpretation that the dependant
who incurs the expenditure must be other than the dependant
to whom the property is transferred by the assessee.
Expenditure incurred for his own purposes by the dependant
to whom the property is transferred by the Hindu undivided
family clearly falls within s. 4 (ii) as amended.
We therefore modify the order of the High Court. The answer
to the first question for each year will be in the negative.
The answer to the second question will be in the
affirmative. It must, however, be understood that this
answer does not imply that the amount of Rs. 10,321/- in
respect of the assessment year 1958-59 was the amount spent
by the trustees. In disposing of the appeal under s. 25(6)
of the Expenditure-tax Act, the Tribunal must make
appropriate adjustments in declaring the liability of the
assessee to pay tax in respect of the expenditure incurred
from the trust estate by the trustees after making the per-
missible deductions under ss. 5 & 6 of the Act. In view of
the partial success, there will be no order as to costs in
this Court and in the High Court.
V.P.S. Order
modified.
600
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