Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MALABAR FISHERIES CO, CALCUTTA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, KERALA
DATE OF JUDGMENT19/09/1979
BENCH:
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
BENCH:
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
BHAGWATI, P.N.
PATHAK, R.S.
CITATION:
1980 AIR 176 1980 SCR (1) 696
1979 SCC (4) 766
CITATOR INFO :
R 1986 SC 368 (9,11,12)
ACT:
Firm dissolved-Assets distributed among partners-
Distribution-If amounts to transfer of assets within the
meaning of express ion "otherwise transferred" in S. 34(3)
(b) 17 Income Tax Act 1961.
Words and Phrase-’Transfer’-Meaning of-Distribution of
assets among, partners-Whether amounts to transfer-Income
Tax Act 1961, S. 2(47).
HEADNOTE:
The appellant, a dissolved firm as originally
constituted on April 1, 1959, consisted of four partners and
carried on different business in different names and styles.
The firm was dissolved on March 31, 1963 and under the deed
of dissolution executed by and between the partners, the
first business concern was taken over by one of the
partners, the remaining concerns by two of the other
partners and the fourth partner received, a sum of money in
lieu of his respective shares in the assets of all the
businesses of the firm. During the four assessment years
1960-61 to 1963-64 the firm had installed various items of
machinery in respect of which it received development rebate
in its respective tax assessments under s. 33 of the Act.
On dissolution of the firm on March 31, 1963, the
Income-tax officer took the view that s. 34(3)(b) of the Act
applied on the ground that there was a sale or transfer of
the machinery by the firm within the period mentioned in
that section and accordingly acting under s. 155(5) of the
Act he withdrew the development rebate allowed to the firm
for the said assessment years, the amending orders being
passed against the dissolved firm.
The appeals preferred by the dissolved firm through one
of its erstwhile partners, were dismissed by the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner who held that s. 155(5) was rightly
resorted to since s. 34(3)(b) of the Act applied to the
case.
The Income-tax Appellate Tribunal allowed the appeals
by the dissolved firm holding that there was no question of
any sale or transfer within the meaning of s. 34(3)(b) in a
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transaction involving the adjustment of the rights of the
partners of a dissolved firm, but at the instance of the
Revenue (Respondent) referred two questions of law to the,
’High Court viz. (a) whether there was only an adjustment of
the mutual rights of the partners and the provisions of s.
34(3) were not applicable and (b) whether there was a
transfer of assets with in the meaning of the words
’otherwise transferred’ occurring in s. 34(3) (b) of the
Act.
The High Court answered the second question in the
affirmative and against the assessee holding that a
dissolution of a firm amounted to extinguishment of the
rights of the firm in the assets of the partnership and
accordingly was a transfer within the meaning of s. 2(47) of
the Act and that, therefore the provisions of s. 34(3)(b)
applied to the case.
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Allowing the appeals to this Court,
^
HELD: 1. There is no transfer of assets involved even
in the sense of any extinguishment of the firm’s rights in
the partnership assets when distribution takes place upon
dissolution. [709 F]
2. Section 34(3) (b) of the Act is not applicable to
the case an(l the view of the Tribunal is upheld. [710 E]
3. The firm as such has no separate rights of its own
in the partnership assets but it is the partners who own
jointly in common the assets of the partner ship and,
therefore, the consequence of the distribution, division or
allotment of assets to the partners which flows upon
dissolution after discharge of liabilities is nothing but a
mutual adjustment of rights between the partners and, there
is no question of any extinguishment of the firm’s rights in
the partnership assets amounting to a transfer of assets
within the meaning of s. 2(47) of the Act. [709 E]
4. On a plain reading of s. 34(3) (b) it will appear
clear that before that provision can be invoked or applied
three conditions are required to be satisfied: (a) that the
ship, machinery or plant must have been sold or otherwise
transferred, (b) that such a sale or transfer must be by the
assessee and (c) that the same must be before they expiry of
eight years from the end of the previous year in which it
was acquired or installed. It is only when these three
conditions are satisfied that any allowance made under s. 33
shall be deemed to have been wrongly made and the Income-tax
officer acting under s. 155(5) will be entitled to withdraw
such allowance. [703 C-D]
5. Section 2(47) gives an artificial extended meaning
to the expression ’transfer’ for, it not merely includes
transactions of ’sale’ and ’exchange’ which in ordinary
parlance would mean transfers but also ’relinquishment’ or
’extinguishment of rights’ which are ordinarily not included
in that concept. [703 E]
6. In Commissioner of Income-Tax v. Dewas Cine
Corporation, 68 I.T.R. 240, the concept of distribution of
assets consequent upon the dissolution of the firm was
considered in the context of the balancing charge arising
under the second proviso to s. 10(2) (vii) of the 1922 Act.
This Court held that the expression "sale or sold" when used
in s. 10(2)(vii) and the second proviso thereto must be
understood in their ordinary meaning and that "sale"
according to its ordinary meaning meant a transfer of
property for a price, and further enunciated the proposition
that the distribution of surplus upon dissolution of a
partnership after discharging debts and obligations was
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always by way of adjustment of rights of partners in the
assets of the partnership and did not amount to a transfer
such less for a price. The question of raising a balancing
charge against the dissolved firm, a separate taxable entity
which had been allowed depreciation in the earlier years,
was also considered by the Court and it took the view that
no balancing charge arose against the firm inasmuch as no
sale or transfer was involved in the transaction of
distribution of the assets to erstwhile partners of the firm
consequent upon its dissolution. [703G, 704 E-G]
7. In Bankey Lal Vaidya’s case, 79 I.T.R. 594, the
concept of distribution of assets to the partners of a firm
consequent upon its dissolution was considered in the
context of the charge on capital gains arising under s.
128(1) of the 1922 Act. This Court observed that the rights
of the parties were adjusted by handing
698
over to one of the partners the entire assets and to the
other partner the money value of his share and such a
transaction was neither a sale nor exchange nor transfer of
the assets of the firm. [704 H, 705 D]
8. (i) It is well-known that commercial men and
accountants on the one hand and lawyers on the other have
different notions respecting the nature of the firm. [705 H]
(ii) Commercial men and accountants are apt to look
upon a film in the light in which lawyers look upon a
corporation i.e. as a body distinct from the members
composing it, and having rights and obligations distinct
from those of its members. [706 B]
(iii) The firm is not recognised by English lawyers as
distinct from the members composing it. What is called the
property of the firm is their property, and what are called
the debts and liabilities of the firm are their debts and
their liabilities. [706 G, H]
Lindley on Partnership 12th Edn. pp. 27 and 28;
referred to.
9. In English jurisprudence a firm is only a
compendious name for certain persons who carry on business
or have authorised one or more of their number to carry it
on, in such a way that they are jointly entitled to the
profits and jointly liable for the debts and losses of the
business. Further, partnership property is regarded as
belonging to the firm, but this is only for the purpose of
distinguishing the same from the separate property of the
partners. But, in law the partnership property is jointly
owned by all the partners composing the firm. [707 B-C]
10. The position as regards the nature of a firm and
its property in Indian Law under the Indian Partnership Act,
1932 is almost the same as in English law. Here also a
partnership firm is not a distinct legal entity and the
partner ship property in law belongs to all the partners
constituting the firm. The Indian Act, like the English Act
avoids making a firm a corporate body enjoying the right of
perpetual succession, [708 B, E]
Bhagwanji Morarji Goculdas v. Alembic Chemical Works
Co. Ltd. and Ors., AIR 1948 PC 100; referred to.
11. A partnership firm under the Indian Partnership
Act, 1932 is not a distinct legal entity apart from the
partners constituting it and equally in law the firm as such
has no separate rights of its own in the partnership assets
and when one talks of the firm’s property or firm’s assets
all that is meant is property in which all partners have a
joint or common interest. [709 C]
Addanki Narayannappa and Anr. v. Bhaskara Krishnappa
and 12 Ors., [1961] 3 S.C.R. 400, referred to.
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12. Every dissolution must in point of time he
anterior to the actual distribution; division or allotment
of the assets that takes place after making accounts and
discharging the debts and liabilities due by the firm. Upon
dissolution the firm ceases to exist; then follows the
making of accounts, then the discharge of debts and
liabilities and thereupon distribution, division or
allotment of assets takes place inter se between the
erstwhile partners by way of mutual adjustment. of rights
between them. The distribution, division or allotment of
assets to the
699
erstwhile partners, is not done by the dissolved firm. In
this sense there is no transfer of assets by the assessee
(dissolved firm) to any person. [710 C]
13. The view Of the High Court that thy. distribution
of assets effected by a deed takes Place eo instanti with
the dissolution or that it is effected by the dissolved firm
not accepted. [710 D]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos.. 196-
199/ 73.
Appeals by Special Leave from the Judgment and order
date 14-7-1972 of the Kerala High Court in Income Tax
Reference Nos. 115-118 of 1970.
K S. Ramamurthy, P. N. Ramalingam and A. T. M. Sampath
for the Appellant.
B. B. Ahuja and Miss A. Subhashini for the Respondent.
The Judgment of The Court was delivered by
TULZAPURKAR, J.-These appeals by special leave raise an
interesting question of law whether the distribution of
assets of a firm consequent on its dissolution amounts to a
transfer of assets within the meaning of the expression
"otherwise transferred" occurring in s. 34 (3) (b) of the
Indian Income Tax Act, 1961, having regard: to the
definition of ’transfer’ in s. 2(47) of the Act ?
The facts giving rise to the question lie in a narrow
compass. The appellant (M/s Malabar Fisheries Co.) is a
dissolved firm represented by one of its erstwhile partners.
The firm as originally constituted on April ], 1959
consisted of four partners and carried on six different
business in six different names and styles namely, (a)
Malabar Fisheries Co., (b) Coastal Engineering Co., (c)
Cochin Tin Factory, (d) Goodwill Industries, all at
Falluruthy, (e) Combine Steel Industries at the Industrial
Estate at Alavakkot and (f) Lite Metal Industries at
Viskhapatnam in Andhra Pradesh. The firm was dissolved on
March 31, 1963 and under the deed of dissolution executed by
and between the partners, the first business concern was
taken over by one of the partners, the remaining five
concerns by two of the other partners and the fourth partner
received a sum of Rs. 3,81,082/- in lieu of his respective
shares in the assets of all the businesses of the firm. It
appears that during the four assessment years 1960-61 to
1963-64 the firm had installed various items of machinery in
respect of which it received development rebate in its
respective tax assessments under s. 33 of the Act. On
dissolution of the firm on March 31, 1963, the Income-tax
Officer took the view that s. 34 (3) (b) of the Act applied
700
on the ground that there was a sale or transfer of the
machinery by the firm within the period mentioned in that
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section and accordingly acting under s. 155 (5) of the Act
he withdrew the development rebate allowed to the firm for
the said assessment years, the amending, orders being passed
against the dissolved firm. The assesses i.e., the dissolved
firm through one of its erstwhile partners preferred appeals
against the order of the Income-tax officer withdrawing the
development rebate but the appellate Assistant Commissioner
by his order dated July 24, 1964 dismissed the appeals
holding that s. 155(5) was rightly resorted to since s. 34
(3) (b) of the Act applied to the case. The matter was
carried in further appeals; by the dissolved firm to the
Income-tax Appellate Tribunal, Cochin Bench, Ernakulam, and
it was contended that the distribution of the assets of the
firm consequent on its dissolution did not amount to a sale
or transfer and, therefore, the transaction would not come
within the purview of s. 34 (3) (b). The Tribunal by its
common order dated January 6, 1970 allowed the appeals
holding that the case fell within the principle laid down by
this Court in the case of Commissioner of Income-tax v.
Dewas Cine Corporation and that there was no question of any
sale or transfer within the meaning of s. 34(3) (b) in a
transaction involving the adjustment of the rights of the
partners of a dissolved firm.
At the instance of the Revenue, the Tribunal referred
two questions of law to the High Court for its opinion,
namely
"(1) Whether on the facts and in the circumstances
of this case, the Appellate Tribunal was legally
correct in holding that there was no question of sale
and that it was only an adjustment of the mutual rights
of the partners and that the provisions of section 34
(3) were not applicable ?
(2) Whether on the facts and in the circumstances
of this case, there was a transfer of assets within the
meaning to the words ’otherwise transferred’ occurring
in Section 34(3) (b) to the Income-Tax Act ?"
The High Court answered the second question in the
affirmative and against the assessee and in view of that
answer, declined to answer first question as being
unnecessary. The High Court took the view that this Court’s
decisions in Dewas Cine Corporation case (supra) and Bankey
Lal Vaidya’s case to the effect that the distribution,
division or allotment of assets between partners of
701
firm consequent on its dissolution amounts to a mutual
adjustment of rights of the partners and does not amount to
a sale or transfer had been rendered under the Income-Tax
Act, 1922 wherein the expression ’sale’ or ’transfer’ had
not been defined whereas in the 1961 Act by which the case
was governed, the expression ’transfer’ had been defined by
s. 2(47) in a very wide manner so as to include not merely a
sale or exchange but also ’extinguishment of any rights’ in
capital assets. The High Court hold that a dissolution of a
firm amounted to extinguishment of the rights of the firm in
the assets of the partnership and accordingly was a transfer
within the meaning of s. 2(47) of the Act and that,
therefore, the provisions of s. 34(3) (b) applied to the
case. It is this view of the High Court that is being
challenged before us in these appals by the assessee.
Counsel for the assessee contented that the High Court
has clearly erred in taking the view that the dissolution of
a firm amounts to extinguishment of the rights of the firm
in the assets of the partnership. be pointed out that in the
two decisions referred to above this Court has clearly
enunciated what happens in law upon the dissolution of a
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firm namely, that the distribution, division or allotment of
assets between the partners on dissolution of the firm is
merely an adjustment of rights inter se between them and
that no sale or transfer is involved in such distribution,
division or allotment. According to him there is no change
in this legal position even after the enactment of the
definition of ’transfer’ in s. 2(47) in the 1961 Act.
Reference was made to this Court’s decision in C.I.T.
Gujarat v. R. M. Amin where this Court has held that no
transfer of capital assets within the meaning of s. 2 (47)
of the, 1961 Act was involved when a shareholder received
money representing his shares on the distribution of the net
assets of the company in liquidation, that he must be
regarded as having received that money in satisfaction of
the rights which belonged to him by virtue of his holding
the shares and that the transaction did not amount to any
sale, exchange, relinquishment of capital assets or
extinguishment of any rights therein. In any case, he
contended that in every case dissolution must be anterior in
point of time to the distribution that takes place after
making accounts and discharging all debts and. liabilities
and as such there is no transfer of any assets by the
assessee (i.e. the dissolved firm) to any person as
contemplated by s. 34(3) (b), but all that happens is that
upon dissolution and upon making up of accounts and
discharge of liabilities it is the erstwhile partners who
mutually adjust their rights and it is by way of adjustment
of such rights
702
that distribution, division or allotment of assets takes
place. He, therefore urged that s. 34 (3) (b) was
inapplicable to the case.
On the other hand, counsel for the Revenue pressed the
High Court’s view for our acceptance. He urged that the
question has to be considered under the 1961 Act in light of
the definition of ’transfer’ contained in s. 2 (47) which
includes within its scope even ’extinguishment of rights in
capital assets’. According to him , during the continuance
of the partnership the machinery undoubtedly belonged to the
firm, the firm as a separate taxable entity got the benefit
Of development rebate which was sought to be withdrawn in as
much as the firm’s rights in the machinery got extinguished
upon dissolution and the same got transferred or vested ill
individual partner or partners as a result of distribution
or allotment made between them be stated qua the. erstwhile
partners there may not be any transfer of assets and there
may be mutual adjustment of rights but qua the firm there is
certainly extinguishment of its rights in the assets of the
partnership and in that sense there is a transfer of assets
within the definition under s. 2 (47) of the Act.
Since in these appeals the question raised relates to
the withdrawal of development rebate under s. 34 (3) (b)
read with s. 155 (5) of the 1961 Act in the light of the
definition of the expression transfer given. under s. 2 (47)
of the Act, it will be desirable to note what these
provisions are. Section 34 (3) (b) in so far as is material
reads:
"34. Conditions for depreciation allowance and
development rebate.
x x x x x
3(b) If any ship, machinery or plant is sold or
otherwise transferred by the assessee to any person at
any time before the expiry of eight years from the end
of the previous year in which it was acquired or
installed, any allowance made under section 33 or under
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the corresponding provisions of the Indian Income-tax
Act, 1922 (XI of 1922), Gin respect of the ship,
machinery or plant shall be deemed to have been wrongly
made for the purposes of this Act, and the provisions
of sub-section (5) of section 155 shall apply
accordingly."
Section 155(5) is a procedural provision enabling the
Income-tax Officer in a case falling under s. 34(3) (b) to
recompute the total income of the assessee for the relevant
previous year and make the necessary amendments; in other
words, acting under this provision the
703
Income-tax officer withdraw is the development rebate
already granted A by passing an amending order. It further
provides that such amending order has to be passed within a
period of 4 years to be reckoned from the end of the
previous year in which the sale or transfer took place.
Section 2(47) defines the expression "transfer" thus:
"2(47) "transfer", in relation to a capital asset,
includes the sale, exchange or relinquishment of the
asset or the extinguishment of any rights therein or
the compulsory acquisition thereof, under any law."
On a plain reading of s. 34(3) (b) it will appear clear
that before that provision can be invoked or applied three
conditions are required to be satisfied: (a) that the ship,
machinery or plant must have been sold or otherwise
transferred, (b) that such a sale or transfer must be by the
assessee and (c) that the same must be before the expiry of
8 years from the end of the previous year in which it was
acquired or installed. It is only when these three
conditions are satisfied that any allowance made under s. 33
shall be deemed to have been wrongly made and the Income-tax
officer acting under s. 155(5) will be entitled to withdraw
such allowance. Further, s. 2(47) gives an artificial
extended meaning to the expression ’transfer’ for, it not
merely includes transactions of ’sale’ and ’exchange’ which
in ordinary par- lance would mean transfers but also
’relinquishment’ or ’extinguishment of rights’ which are
ordinarily not included in that concept. The question is
whether the distribution, division or allotment of assets of
firm consequent on its dissolution amounts to a transfer of
assets within the meaning of the words "otherwise
transferred" occurring in s. 34(3) (b) of the Act, regard
being had to the definition of "trans- for" contained in s.
2(47) ? To put it pithily, the question is whether the
dissolution of a firm extinguishes the firm’s rights in the
assets of the partnership so as to constitute a transfer of
assets under s. 2(47) ?
In Dewas Cine Corporation case (supra) the concept of
distribution of assets consequent upon the dissolution of
the firm was considered in the context of the balancing
charge arising under the second proviso to s. 10(2) (vii) of
the 1922 Act. In that case two individuals, each of whom
owne da cinema theatre, formed a partnership to carry on
business of exhibition of cinematograph films, bringing the
theatres into the books of the firm as its assets. For the
assessment years 1950-51 to 1952-53 the Income Tax Officer
allowed depreciation aggregating to Rs. 44,380/- in the
assessment of the firm in respect of the two theatres. On
the dissolution of the firm on September 30.
704
1951, the theatres were returned to their original owners.
In the books of the firm the assets were shown as taken over
at the original price less the depreciation allowed, the
depreciation being equally divided between the two erstwhile
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partners. The Tribunal took the view that by restoring the
theatres to the original owners there was a transfer by the
partnership and the entries adjusting depreciation and
writing off the assets at the original value amounted to
local recoupment of the entire depreciation by the
partnership and on that account the balancing charge arose
under the second proviso to s. 10(2) (vii) of the Act. This
Court held that on the dissolution of the partnership, each
theatre had to be deemed to be returned to the original
owner in satisfaction partially or wholly of his claim to a
share in the residue of the assets after discharging the
debts and other obligations. But thereby the theaters were
not in law sold by the partnership to the individual
partners in consideration of their respective shares in the
residue, and, therefore, the amount of Rs. 44,380/- could
not be included in the total income of the partnership as a
balancing charge arising under the second proviso to s.
10(2)(vii).
It is true that this Court was concerned with
interpreting the expression "sold" used in s. 10(2) (vii)
and the second proviso thereto, when the expressions "sale
or sold" had nowhere been defined in the Act, and,
therefore, this Court held that those expressions when used
in s. 10(2) (vii) and the second proviso thereto must be
understood in their ordinary meaning and that "sale"
according to its ordinary meaning meant a transfer of
property for a price. This Court further enunciated the
proposition that the distribution of surplus upon
dissolution of a partnership after discharging its debts and
obligations was always by way of adjustment of rights of
partners in the assets of the partnership and did not amount
to a transfer much less for a price. It is significant to
note that the question of raising a balancing charge against
the dissolved firm, a separate taxable entity which had been
allowed depreciation in the earlier years, was considered by
this Court and this Court took the view that no balancing
charge arose against the firm inasmuch as no sale or
transfer was involved in the transaction of distribution of
the assets to erstwhile partners of the firm consequent upon
its dissolution.
In Bankey Lal Vaidya’s case (supra) the concept of
distribution of assets to the partners of a firm consequent
upon its dissolution was considered in the context of the
charge on capital gains arising under ’H s. 128(1) of the
1922 Act. In that case the respondent assessee, the Karta of
a Hindu undivided family, entered into a partnership with to
carry on business of manufacturing and selling
pharmaceutical
705
products and literature relating thereto. On the dissolution
of the partnership, its assets, which included goodwill,
machinery, furniture, medicines, library and copyright in
respect of certain publications, were valued at Rs.
2,50,000. Since a large majority of assets was incapable of
physical division, it was agreed that the assets be taken
over by and the respondent assessee be paid his share of
the value of the assets in money and accordingly he was paid
Rs. 1,25,000/-. The question was whether the sum of Rs.
65,000/-, being part of the amount received by the
respondent assessee could be brought to tax as capital gains
under s. 12B(1) of the Act ? This Court held that the
arrangement between the partners of the firm amounted to a
distribution of the assets of the firm on dissolution, that
there was no sale or exchange of the respondent’s share in
the capital assets to D, nor did he transfer his share in
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the capital assets and, therefore, the sum of Rs. 65,000/-
could not be taxed as capital gains. The Court observed that
the rights of the parties were adjusted by handing over to
one of the partners the entire assets and to the other
partner the money value of his share and such a transaction
was neither a sale nor exchange nor transfer of assets of
the firm.
It cannot, however, be disputed that both these
decisions were rendered under the 1922 Act which did not
define expressions like "sale" or "transfer" and the
question is whether any difference is E; made in the legal
position under the 1961 Act by reason of the enactment of
the definition of the expression "transfer" in s. 2(47),
which includes within its scope a transaction by way of
’extinguishment of any rights in a capital asset’ ? The
precise argument which has been advanced by the counsel for
the Revenue before us, and which found Favour with the High
Court is that during the continuance of the partnership the
machinery belonged to the firm, that the firm as a taxable
entity received the benefit of development rebate in respect
thereof under s. 33 of the Act and that upon dissolution the
firm’s rights in the machinery got extinguished and became
vested in the partner or partners to whom it was allotted in
the distribution of assets, and, therefore, the transaction
so far as the firm is concerned amounts to a transfer of
assets under s. 2(47). The question is how far is it correct
to say that in law the firm as such has rights in the
partnership assets liable to extinguishment upon dissolution
?
It is well-known that commercial men and accountants on
the one hand and lawyers on the other have different notions
respecting the nature of the firm and this difference
between the mercantile view and
706
the legal view has been explained in Lindley on Partnership
12th Edn. at pages 27 and 28 thus:
"Partners are called collectively a firm.
Merchants and lawyers have different notions respecting
the nature of a firm Commercial man and accountants are
apt to look upon a firm in the light in which lawyers
look upon a corporation i.e., as a body distinct from
the members composing it, and having rights and
obligations distinct from those of its members. Hence,
in keeping partnership accounts, the firm is made
debtor to each partner for what he brings into the
common stock, and each partner is made debtor to the
firm for all that he takes out of that stock. In the
mercantile view, partners are never indebted to each
other in respect of partnership transactions; but are
always either debtors to or creditors of the firm
Owing to this impersonification of the firm, there
is tendency to regard its rights and obligations as
unaffected by the introduction of a new partner, or by
the death or retirement of an old one. Notwithstanding
such changes among its members, the firm is considered
as continuing the same; and the rights and obligations
of the old firm are regarded as continuing in favour of
or against the new firm as if no changes had occurred.
The partners are the agents and sureties of the firm,
its agent for the transaction of its business, its
sureties for the liquidation of its liabilities so far
as the assets of the firm are insufficient to meet
them. The liabilities of the firm are regarded as the
liabilities of the partners only in case they cannot be
met by the firm and discharged out of its assets.
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But this is not the legal notion of a firm. The
firm is not recognised by English lawyers as distinct
from the members composing it. In taking partnership
accounts and in administering partnership assets,
Courts have to some extent adopted the mercantile view,
and actions may now, speaking generally, be brought by
or against partners in the name of their firm; but
speaking generally, the firm as such has no legal
recognition. The law, ignoring the firm, looks to the
partners com posing it; any change amongst them
destroys the identity of the firm; what is called the
property of the firm is their property, and what are
called the debts and liabilities of the firm are their
debts and their liabilities. In point of law, a partner
may be the debtor or the creditor of his co-partners,
707
but he cannot be either debtor or creditor of the firm
of which he is himself a member, nor can he be employed
by his firm, for a man cannot be his own employer".
(Emphasis supplied) .
Unlike the Scottish system of law where the firm is a
legal person distinct from the partners composing it, the
English Partnership Act, 1890, avoids making a firm a
distinct legal entity. In English jurisprudence a firm is
only a compendious name for certain persons who carry on
business, or have authorised one or more of their number to
carry it on, in such a way that they are jointly entitled to
the profits and jointly liable for the debts and losses of
the business. Further it is true that partnership property
is regarded as belonging to the firm, but that is only for
the purpose of distinguishing the same form the separate
property of the partners. But, in law the partnership
property is jointly owned by all the partners composing the
firm. In Lindley on Partnership at page 359 the following
statement of law occurs:
"The expression partnership property, partnership
stock, partnership assets, joint stock, and joint
estate, are used indiscriminately to denote everything
to which the firm, or in other words all the partners
composing it, can be considered to be entitled as
such."
Again at page 375 the following statement of law
occurs:
"In the absence of a special agreement to that
effect, all the members of an ordinary partnership are
interested in the whole of the partnership property,
but it is not quite clear whether they are interested
therein as tenants in com mon, or as joint tenants
without benefit of survivorship, if indeed there is any
difference between the two. It follows from this
community of interest that no partner has a right to
take any portion of the partnership property and to say
that it is his exclusively. No partner has any such
right, either during the existence of the partnership
or after it has been dissolved."
As regards the nature of a share of a partner in a firm the
following passage in Lindley on Partnership at page 375
brings out legal position very clearly:
"What is meant by the share of a partner in his
proportion of the partnership assets after they have
been all realised and converted into money, and all the
partnership debts and
708
liabilities have been paid and discharged. This it is,
and this only, which on the death of a partner passes
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to his representative, or to a legatee of his share....
and which - ; on his bankruptcy passes to his trustee."
The position as regards the nature of a firm and its
property in Indian . law under the Indian Partnership Act,
1932 is almost the same as in English law. Here also a
partnership firm is not a distinct legal entity and the
partnership property in law belongs to all the partners
constituting the firm. In Bhagwanji Morarji Goculdas v.
Alembic Chemcial Works Co. Ltd. and others the Privy Council
in para 10 of the judgment observed thus:
"Before the Board it was argued that under the
Indian Partnership Act, 1932, a firm is recognised as
an entity apart from the persons constituting it, and
that the entity continues so long as the firm exists
and continues to carry on its business. It is true that
the Indian Partnership Act goes further than the
English Partnership Act, 1890, in recognising that a
firm may possess a personality distinct from the
persons constituting it; the law in India in that
respect being more in accordance with the law of
Scotland, than with that of England. But the fact that
a firm possesses a distinct personality does not
involve that the personality continues unchanged so
long as the business of the firm continues. The Indian
Act, like the English Act, avoids making a firm a
corporate body enjoying the right of perpetual
succession. (Emphasis supplied).
It is true that under the Civil Procedure Code order
XXX, as under the English Rules of Court, actions may be
brought by or against partners in the name of the firm and
even between firms and their members but that is only a
matter of procedure. It is also true that the firm’s
property is recognised in more than one way (ss. 14 and 15
of the Partnership Act) but only as that which is "joint
estate" of all the partners as distinguished from the
"separate estate" of any of them, and not as belonging to a
body distinct in law from its members. In Addanki
Narayanappa & Anr. v. Bhaskara Krishnappa and 13 Ors, this
Court after quoting with approval the aforementioned
passages occurring in Lindley on Partnership, 12th Edn.,
made the following observations in the context of partners’
right during the subsistence as well as upon the dissolution
of a firm:
709
"No doubt since a firm has no legal existence, the
partnership property will vest in all the partners and
in that sense every partner has an interest in the
property of the partnership. During the subsistence of
the partnership, how ever, no partner can deal with any
portion of the property as his own nor can he assign
his interest in a specific item of property of any one.
His right is to obtain such profits, if R any, as fall
to his share from time to time and upon the dissolution
of the firm to a share in the assets of the firm which
remain after satisfying the liabilities set out in cl.
(a) and sub-cls. (i), (ii) and (iii) of cl. (b) of s.
48."
Having regard to the above discussion, it seems to us
clear that a partnership firm under the Indian Partnership
Act, 1932 is not a distinct legal entity apart from the
partners constituting it and equally in law the firm as such
has no separate rights of its own in the partnership assets
and when one talks of the firm’s property. Or firm’s assets
all that is meant is property or assets in which all
partners have a joint or common interest. If that be the
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position, it is difficult to accept the contention that upon
dissolution the firm’s rights in the partnership assets are
extinguished. The firm as such has no separate rights of its
own in the partnership assets but it is the partners who own
jointly in common the assets of the partnership and,
therefore, the consequences of the distribution, division or
allotment of assets to the partners which flows upon
dissolution after discharge of liabilities is nothing but a
mutual adjustment of rights between the partners and there
is no question of any extinguishment of the firm’s rights in
the partnership assets amounting to a transfer of assets
within the meaning of s. (47) of the Act. In our view,
therefore, there is no transfer of assets involved even in
the sense of any extinguishment the firm’s rights in the
partnership assets when distribution takes place upon
dissolution.
Counsel for the Revenue referred us to a decision of
the Karnataka High Court in Additional Com missioner of
Income-Tax v. M. A. J. Vasanaik, where that Court has taken
the view that when individual assets are brought in a
partnership firm so as to constitute the partnership
property, there is a transfer of interest of the individual
to the partnership and ss. 34(3) (b) and 155(5) of 1961 Act
are attracted. In the first instance, that decision dealt
with the converse case and it does not necessarily follow on
parity of reasoning that the distribution, division or
allotment of partnership assets to partners of a firm upon
its dissolution would amount to a transfer of assets as was
sought to be contended by the counsel for the Revenue.
Secondly, it is unnecessary
710
for us to express any opinion on the correctness or
otherwise of the view taken by the Karnataka High Court in
that case.
There is yet another reason for rejecting the
contention of the counsel for the Revenue and that is that
the second condition required to be satisfied for attracting
s. 34(3) (b) cannot be said to have been satisfied in the
case. It is necessary that the sale or transfer of assets
must be by the assessee to a person. Now every dissolution
must h point of time be anterior to the actual distribution,
division or allotment of the assets that takes place after
making accounts and discharging the debts and liabilities
due by the firm. Upon dissolution the firm ceases to exist;
then follows the making up of accounts, then the discharge
of debts and liabilities and there upon Distribution,
division or allotment of assets takes place inter se between
the erstwhile partners by way of mutual adjustment of rights
between them. The distribution, division or allotment of
assets to the erstwhile partners, is not done by the
dissolved firm. In this sense there is no transfer of assets
by the assessee (dissolved firm) to any person. It Dis not
possible to accept the view of the High Court that the
distribution of assets effected by a deed takes place eo
instanti’ with the dissolution or that it is effected by the
dissolved firm.
In the result we are clearly of the view that s.
34(3)(b) of the Act was not applicable to the case and we
uphold the view of the Tribunal. The appeals are, therefore,
allowed and the Revenue will pay the costs of the appeals to
the appellant.
N.V.K. Appeal allowed
711
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