Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
TRUESTEES OF H.E.H. NIZAM’S PILGRIMAGE MONEY TRUST, HYDERABA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE COLLECTOR OF ESTATE DUTY, HYDERABAD
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 21/07/1998
BENCH:
SUJATA V. MANOHAR, K. VENKATASWAMI
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U DG M E N T
Mrs. Sujata V. Manohar, J.
The appellants are the trustees of H.E.H. Nizam
Pilgrimage Money Trust, Hyderabad. On 2.11.1950, H.E.H.
Nizam of the erstwhile State of Hyderabad created a trust
under which the settlor set apart Government of India Loan
Securities of the face value of Rs.22.20 lakhs yielding an
annual income of Rs. 66,600/- for certain charitable and
religious purposes. The relevant clause of this settlement
is Clause 3(c). The relevant provisions of Clause 3 are as
under:
"3. The Trustees shall hold and
stand possessed of the Trut Fund
UPON TRUST :-
(a) To manage the Trust Fund
and to recover the
interest and other income
thereof;
(b) To pay and discharge out
of the income of the
Trust Fund all expenses
and charges for
collecting and recovering
the income of the Trust
Fund and all other costs,
Charges, incidental to
the trusts of these
presents and the
administration thereof;
(c) During the lifetime of the
Settlor to defray the
expenses of Haj of the
Settlor and of such of
the members of his family
as he may take with him
and of their visit and
pilgrimage to various
Mohmmedan Shrines and
holy places in Hedjaz and
Iraq and for making
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religious offerings and
expending moneys for
charitable purposes at
such places and for such
other religious or
charitable purposes as
the Settlor in his
absolute discretion may
from time to time think
fit and require out of
the income as well as the
corpus of the Trust Fund
in such manner and to
such extent as the
Settlor may from time to
time direct and for all
or nay of such purposes
as aforesaid to pay such
moneys out of the income
or the corpus of the
Trust Fund as the Settlor
may from time to time
require."
The settlor appointed himself as one of the trustees
along with other trustees. The settlor died on 24.2.1967.
The Assistant controller of Estate Duty held that the
settlor was not completely excluded from enjoying the
benefit of the corpus of the trust and hence under Section
10 of the Estate Duty Act, 1953 the property which was the
subject matter of the settlement was includible in the
estate of the deceased. On appeal, the Appellate Controller
of Estate Duty also held Section 10 to be applicable. In
second appeal before the Tribunal, three contentions were
raised on behalf of the revenue invoking Section 12 as a
more relevant section, and submitting that under Section 12
also the property which was the subject matter of the
settlement was includible in the estate of the deceased.
This contention was upheld by the Tribunal.
From the decision of the Tribunal, the following
question was referred to the High Court under Section 64(1)
of the Estate Duty Act, 1953:
"Whether on the facts and in the
circumstances of the case, the
trust property of the value of
Rs.13,57,205/- is liable to be
included in the estate duty
assessment of the deceased as
property deemed to pass - (a)
either under Section 12 of the
Estate Duty Act, (b) or under
section 10 of the Estate Duty Act?"
The High Court held that Section 10 of the Estate Duty
Act, 1953 was not attracted but Section 12 was attracted.
Therefore, the subject matter of the settlement had been
rightly included in the estate of the deceased. The present
appeal has been preferred before us under a certificate
granted by the High court.
Considerable arguments were advanced before the High
Court on the question whether a property settled on trust,
as in the present case comes within the definition of
"settled property" under Section 2(19) of the Estate Duty
Act, 1953. The High Court has held in the affirmative. There
is no dispute before us that the property which is the
subject matter of the trust in the present case can be
considered as settled property as defined in Section 2(19).
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The first question is, whether Section 10 of the Estate Duty
Act, 1953 is attracted in the present case. Section 10 is as
follows:
"10. Gifts whenever made where
donor not entirely excluded -
Property taken under any gift,
whenever made, shall be deemed to
pass on the donor’s death to the
extent that bona fide possession
and enjoyment of it was not
immediately assumed by the done and
thenceforward retained to the
entire exclusion of the donor or of
any benefit to him by contract or
otherwise:
Provided that the property
shall not be deemed to pass by
reason only that it was not, as
from the date of the gift,
exclusively retained as aforesaid,
if, by means of the surrender of
the reserved benefit or otherwise,
it is subsequently enjoyed to the
entire exclusion of the donor or of
any benefit to him for at least two
years before the death:
Provided further............"
This section, as its marginal note suggests, deals with
gifts whenever made where the donor is not entirely
excluded. Under the main part of the section, any property
taken under any gift, if bona fide possession and enjoyment
is not immediately assumed by the done and retained by him
to the exclusion of the donor, would be property deemed to
pass on the donor’s death to the extent of such retention of
benefit. This section also provides that if any benefit in
the property given as a gift is retained by the donor by
contract or otherwise, that benefit shall be deemed to pass
on the donor’s death. The proviso lays down that if after
the date of the gift, either by means of an express
surrender of the retained benefit by the donor or otherwise,
the property is enjoyed to the exclusion of the donor for at
least two years before his death, such property shall not be
deemed to pass on the death of the donor. In the present
case, the settlor, H.E.H. Nizam of Hyderabad, never, in
fact, enjoyed any benefit under the said trust at any time.
Therefore, there can be no application of Section 10 in the
present case, in any event.
The parties before us have, therefore, focused their
arguments on Section 12 of the Estate Duty Act, 1953. The
relevant Provisions of Section 12 are as follows:
"12. Settlements with reservation.-
(1) Property passing under any
settlement made by the deceased by
deed or any other instrument not
taking effect as a will whereby an
interest in such property for life
or any other period determinable by
reference to death is reserved
either expressly or by implication
to the settlor or whereby the
settlor may have reserved to
himself the right by the exercise
of any power, to restore to himself
or to reclaim the absolute interest
in such property shall be deemed to
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pass on the settlor’s death:
provided that the property
shall not be deemed to pass on the
settlor’s death by reason only that
any such interest or right was so
reserved if by means of the
surrender of such interest or right
the property is subsequently
enjoyed to the entire exclusion of
the settlor and of any benefit to
him by contract or otherwise, for
at least two years before his
death:
Provided further..........
Explanation - A settlor
reserving an interest in the
settled property for the
maintenance of himself and any of
his relatives (as defined in
section 27) shall be deemed to
reserve an interest for himself
within the meaning of this section.
(2)..................."
In the present case under the settlement the property has
been transferred absolutely to the trustees. However, under
Clauses 3 of the settlement, the trustees are directed,
during the lifetime of the settlor, to defray the expenses
of Haj of the settlor and all such members of his family who
may accompany him on pilgrimage to various Mohammaden
Shrines and holy places in Hedjaz and Iraq and for making
religious offerings and expending money for charitable
purposes. The said clause also provides for expending income
as well as part of the corpus of the trust fund for
religious and charitable purposes as the settlor may direct.
Can this be considered as the settlor retaining interest in
the settled property for life or any other period
determinable by reference to his death? The Explanation to
Section 12 expressly provides that where a settlor reserves
an interest in the settled property for the maintenance of
himself or any of his relatives, he shall be deemed to
reserve an interest in the settled property for himself
within the meaning of Section 12(1). In the present case,
however, the settlor has not reserved any right to receive
maintenance either for himself or for any of his relatives.
Hence the Explanation is not relevant here. However, the
settlor is entitled to have Haj expenses of himself and any
accompanying family members paid out of the trust fund. The
settlor has also reserved the right to direct the religious
and charitable purposes on which the trust fund may be
spent. These are not benefits which accrue directly to the
settlor himself, as in the case of his own maintenance. The
pilgrimage expenses, however, of the deceased and any
accompanying family members are to be defrayed out of the
trust fund if an when the settlor goes on such a pilgrimage.
As a matter of fact the deceased never went on any
pilgrimage as specified in Clause 3(c) and did not receive
any benefit directly or indirectly under the said trust. In
our view, the direction in the trust deed that the expenses
of the settlor for pilgrimage performed for religious
purposes, be paid out of the trust fund, will not be
equivalent to reserving an interest in the property for
life. Nor will payment towards religious and charitable
purposes at the direction of the settlor constitute a
reservation of any interest by the settlor for himself in
such property for life.
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Our attention in this connection has been drawn to a
decision of this Court in the case of Controller of Estate
Duty V. R. Kanakasabai and Ors. (89 ITR 251). In that case,
the deceased had executed separate deeds of settlement in
favour of his sons, grandsons, daughter and wife, settling
properties severally in favour of the respective
beneficiaries absolutely and with full power of alienation.
The deeds in favour of the sons and grandsons, however
provided for payment of Rs.1,000/- per annum to the settlor;
and the deed in favour of the Daughter provided for the
maintenance of the settlor and his wife during their
lifetime. It was held by this Court that Section 12 was
wholly inapplicable to the facts of the case. On the
question of applicability of Section 12, the Court observed
as follows:
"So far as the applicability of
section 12(1) is concerned, it is
nobody’s case that the
beneficiaries became entitled to
the properties settled on them
after the death of the deceased.
There is no support for the
contention of the revenue that an
interest in the properties settled
was reserved to the deceased during
his lifetime or for any period
after the properties were settled;
nor is there any provision in the
deeds enabling the deceased to
reclaim the property or its
possession under any circumstance.
None of the conditions laid down in
section 12(1) are attracted to the
provisions contained in the deeds
of settlement."
On the applicability of Section 10, the Court
considered whether the donor had retained in the property
gifted, any benefit to himself by contract or otherwise. The
Court said that the deceased should be entirely excluded
from the property or from any benefit by contract or
otherwise. Provisions for annual payments and maintenance
made in the deeds were not charged on the properties
settled. Hence, the deceased could not be said to have
retained any interest in the properties settled. Therefore,
Section 10 was not applicable. In the present case, the
deceased has not retained any benefit to himself. As we have
set out already, Section 10 in any case, will not be
attracted in the present case.
The application of Section 12 was considered by this
court in the case of Dipti Narayan Srimani v. Controller of
Estate Duty, West Bengal (172 ITR 477). In this case, the
settlor executed two deeds of trust. In the first deed, the
settlor transferred to himself four items of property to be
held on trust: (1) to set apart 1/4th of the net income for
effecting certain additions and alterations to the property;
(2) to make over another 1/4th of the net income to the
shebait of a deity; (3) to apply 1/4th of the net income to
certain charities; and (4) to apply the remaining 1/4th for
the personal benefit of the settlor during his lifetime and
to his heirs thereafter. In the second deed, the settlor
transferred six other items of property to himself and his
son as trustees: (1) to pay 1/4th of the net income to the
shebait of another deity, (2) to spend 1/4th on charities,
and (3) to utilise the balance of one-half for the
development of two of the properties and after completion of
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development, for the benefit of the settlor during his
lifetime and his heirs thereafter. The settlor provided one
room in one of the properties for his residence free. The
settlor also constituted himself as shebait during his
lifetime and thereafter his heirs were to be the she baits
of the two deities. This Court held that Section 12(1) was
attracted. It, inter alia, observed that the reservation of
interest so as to attract Section 12(1), had to be in the
property comprised in the settlement as such. mere
collateral benefits reserved by the settlor emanating from
some other property or from other source, independent of the
property so settle, would not attract this section. But in
the case before the Court, the benefits reserved emanated
from the very property constituting the subject matter of
settlements and could not be said to be collateral in their
nature. The Court observed, (page 487,) that having regard
to the special nature of the office of a shebait and the
rights and interests that go with it, it is possible to
contend that when a settlor endows property to an idol and
reserves the right of shebaitship to himself, he would be
reserving an interest in the property. distinguishing the
earlier judgment of this court in controller of Estate Duty,
Bihar V, Mahant Umesh Narain Puri (135 ITR 139), this Court
said that the position of an elected Mahant in Math
properties was different. In that case, no interest passes
on the death of a Mahant duly elected, and Section 12 is not
attracted. But the case of a settlor who himself endows
property to an idol and constitutes himself as shebait is
obviously different. The Court, however, did not finally
pronounce on the effect of reservation of shebaitship by a
settlor in the context of Section 12(1). In the English
cases which have been referred to in the said judgment, the
settlors had reserved a benefit to themselves, their wives
or children in the income of the settled property for their
maintenance. The English court observed that this amounted
to an interest in the settled property.
The Explanation to Section 12 expressly takes care of
such a situation by providing that a settlor reserving a
right to receive maintenance for himself or any of his
relatives from the settled property or its income shall be
deemed to reserve an interest in the settled property for
himself within the meaning of that section. Any other kind
of an indirect benefit to the settlor under the trust in
certain eventualities will not amount to reservation of an
interest in the settled property by the settlor for himself.
In the case of Ravindra Gunvantilal v. controller of
Estate Duty, Gujarat, the Gujarat High Court (P.N. Bhagwati,
CJ, as he then was and Divan, J.) considered a case where
there was a joint settlement by the deceased and his wife in
respect of certain properties belonging separately to each
of them. The deceased and his wife were appointed as
trustees and the settlement deed provided that until the
death of the last survivor of the deceased and his three
sons, the trustee shall apply the net income for and towards
maintenance and personal support of all or such one or more
exclusively of the other or others of the deceased, his
wife, his children and widow and issues, if any, of any of
his sons. Th application was to be in such shares and
proportions as the trustee may from time to time think
proper. The trustees also had the absolute discretion to pay
the whole of the net income of the settled property to any
one or more of these persons to the exclusion of others. The
Gujarat High Court held that where a settlor is one of the
objects of a discretionary trust and the trustees are given
an absolute discretion to pay the income of the settled
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properties to one or more of the objects to the exclusion of
others, the settlor has an interest in the settled
properties within the meaning of Section 12(1) and he must
be held to have reserved to himself an interest in the
settled properties for life sufficient to bring his case
within section 12(1).
In the present case, the settlor does not appear to
have reserved for himself any interest which would be
sufficient to bring his case within Section 12(1). All the
cases which have been cited before us are cases in which the
settlor had, in some form or the other, reserved the right
to receive income or part of it from the settled property
during his lifetime either by way of maintenance or in a
similar form. Such is not the case here. Provisions of
section 12(1) would not, therefore, be attracted to the
present trust created by the settlor during his lifetime.
This will be more so since, in fact, the settlor did not
receive any amount from the said trust during his lifetime.
Nor did he undertake any pilgrimage.
In the order of the Appellate Commissioner, there was
also a reference to a release deed executed by the settlor
relinquishing all his powers which would be beneficial to
him in the various trusts created by him. This trust was
also covered by the release deed. However, apart from this
bare reference to a Release Deed, no attempt has been made
to bring the release deed on record. No arguments have been
advanced on this aspect. We are, therefore, not examining
this question from the point of view of the execution of a
release deed by the settlor. Looking, however, to the
language of Section 12(1), the facts in the present case do
not indicate that any interest within the meaning of Section
12 was retained by the settlor in the settled property for
life or any other period determinable by reference to his
death. Hence Section 12(1) is not attracted.
The appeal is, therefore, allowed and the impugned
order of the High Court is set aside. The question referred
is answered in the negative and in favour of the appellant.
There will, however, be no order as to costs.