Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
CHARANDAS HARIDAS AND ANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX,BOMBAY NORTH, KUTCH, SAURASHT
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
15/03/1960
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
DAS, S.K.
KAPUR, J.L.
CITATION:
1960 AIR 910 1960 SCR (3) 296
CITATOR INFO :
E 1960 SC1147 (19)
R 1965 SC1708 (5)
RF 1966 SC 719 (8)
F 1967 SC 383 (12)
RF 1967 SC 617 (33)
R 1971 SC 383 (4)
D 1982 SC 760 (25)
R 1983 SC 409 (10,13,15,21,22)
ACT:
Income-tax-Income from managing agency-Karta of Hindu
undivided family becoming partner of managing agency firm-
Income therefrom, assessed as family income-Subsequent
Partition of managing commission-Claim for assessment as
individual income of divided members.
HEADNOTE:
C, who was the Karta of the Hindu undivided family con-
sisting of his wife, three sons and himself, was a partner
in six managing agency firms in six Mills, and the income
received by him as partner ’was being assessed as that of
the Hindu undivided family for the purposes of income-tax.
On December 31, 1945, C, acting for his three minor sons and
himself, and his wife entered into an oral agreement for a
partial partition, with effect from January 1, 1946, by
which C gave a certain share to his daughter in the managing
agency commission from two of the six managing agencies held
by the family and the balance together with the share* in
the other managing agencies was divided into five equal
shares between C, his wife and sons. The agreement was
subsequently recorded in a document dated September II,
1946, which recited, inter alia: " By this partition we
decided that whatever commission fell due till 31-12-45 and
which is received after 31-12-45 should be kept joint and in
respect of the commission which accrues from 1-1-46 and
received after that date each of us become absolute owner of
his one-fifth share and therefore from the date, i.e., from
1-1-46 these commissions cease to be the joint property of
our family." For the assessment years 1947-48 and 1948-49, C
claimed that the income from the managing agency firms
should no longer be treated as the income of the Hindu
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undivided family but as the separate income of the divided
members, but the Income-tax authorities rejected the claim
on the grounds that by the document in question the division
was of the income and not of the assets from which the
income was
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derived and since income-tax was payable at the moment of
time when income accrued, this income must be taken to have
accrued to the Hindu undivided family:
Held, that inasmuch as there was no other effective mode of
partitioning this asset and further in view of the finding
that the partition was not a pretence, the asset must be
treated as divided for purposes of income-tax law and the
income was not assessable as the income of the Hindu
undivided family.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 108 of 1957.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
February 16, 1955, of the Bombay High Court in Income-tax
Reference No. 35/x of 1954.
A.V. Viswanatha Sastri, B. K. B. Naidu and I. N. Shroff,
for the appellants.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India K. N. Rajagopal
Sastri and D. Gupta, for the respondents.
1960. March 15. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
HIDAYATULLAH, J.-This is an appeal with the Hid special
leave of this Court against the judgment and order dated
February 16, 1955, of the High Court of Bombay in an Income-
tax Reference under s. 66(2) of the Indian Income-tax Act.
The appellants are two assessees, Charandas Haridas and
Chinubhai Haridas, whose cases are identical, and, in fact,
there was a consolidated reference by the Income-tax
Appellate Tribunal, which was answered by the High Court by
its judgment. The respondents are respectively the
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay North, Kutch and
Saurashtra and the Commissioner of Income-tax, Delhi, Ajmer,
Rajasthan and Madhya Bharat. The two appellants represented
two units of Hindu undivided families. Charandas Haridas
represented his wife, three sons and himself, and Chinubhai
Haridas represented his wife, son and himself. In stating
the facts relative to the two families, it will not be
necessary to give them separately, because the question
which was answered by the High Court in the judgment under
appeal arose in identical circumstances in the two families.
The only difference is in the shares held respectively by
the two Hindu undivided families in the managing
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agencies to be hereafter mentioned. We will, therefore,
confine ourselves to a statement of the facts relating to
Charandas Haridas only.
Charandas Haridas was the Karta of the Hindu undivided
family consisting of his wife, three sons and himself. He
was a partner in six managing agency firms in six Mills. In
previous years, the income received by him as partner in
these managing agencies was being assessed as the income of
the Hindu undivided family. On December 31, 1945, Charandas
Haridas acting for his three minor sons and himself and
Shantaben, his wife, entered into an oral agreement for a
partial partition. By that agreement Charandas Haridas gave
an one pie share to his daughter, Pratima, in the managing
agency commission from two of the six managing agencies held
by the family. The balance together with the shares in the
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other managing agencies was divided into five equal shares
between Charandas Haridas, his wife and sons. This
agreement was to come into effect from January 1, 1946,
which was the beginning of a fresh accounting year. On
September 11, 1946, Charandas Haridas acting for himself and
his minor sons, and Shantaben executed a memorandum of
partial partition in which the above facts were-recited, the
document purporting to be a record of what had taken place
orally earlier.
In the assessment years 1947-48 and 1948-49, Charandas
Haridas claimed that the income should no longer be treated
as the income of the Hindu undivided family but as the
separate income of the divided members. The Income-tax
Officer declined to treat the income as any but of the Hindu
undivided family, and assessed the income as before. An
appeal to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner was
un.successful, and the matter was taken to the Income-tax
Appellate Tribunal. The Appellate Tribunal held that by the
document in question, the division, if any, was of the
income and not of the assets from which the income was
derived, inasmuch as " the agreements of the managing agency
with the managed Companies did not undergo any change
whatever as a result of the alleged partition The Appellate
Tribunal,
299
therefore, held that the arrangement to share the receipts
from this source of income was not binding on the
Department, if the assets themselves continued to remain
joint. It further held that the document was " a farce ",
and did not save the family from assessment as Hindu
undivided family. The Tribunal having declined to state a
ease under s. 66(1) of the Indian Income- tax Act, Charandas
Haridas moved the Bombay High Court, and obtained an order
under s. 66(2) of the Act. The question on which the case
was stated was:
" Whether there were materials to justify the finding of the
Tribunal that the income in the share of the commission
agency of the Mills was the income of the Hindu undivided
family ? "
The High Court stated that though the reference was very
elaborately argued, it raised a very simple question of fact
and all that it was required to find out was whether there
were materials before the Appellate Tribunal upon which the
finding of fact could be rested. The High Court held that
though the finding given by the Appellate Tribunal could not
be construed as a finding that the document was not genuine,
the method adopted by the family to partition the assets was
insufficient to bring about the result intended by it.
According to the High Court, the Appellate Tribunal war,
right in holding that the document was ineffective, and
though the income might have been purported to be divided
and might, in fact, have been so divided, the source of
income. still remained united as belonging to the Hindu un-
divided family. It accordingly answered the question in the
affirmative, holding that there were materials before the
Tribunal on which it could reach the conclusion that in so
far as these income-bearing assets were concerned, they
still belonged to the Hindu undivided family. Leave to
appeal to this Court was refused by the High Court, but
Charandas Haridas applied to this Court and obtained special
leave, and the present appeal was filed.
Mr. Viswanatha Sastri appearing for Charandas Haridas,
pointed out that a Hindu undivided family cannot be a
partner of a firm Charandasa, Haridas,
300
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therefore, though he represented the Hindu undivided family,
in his capacity as a partner could not insist that the other
members of the family be received as partners, or
admitted to the benefits of partnership. The only mode in
which the partition could be made was to divide the income,
and this bad the necessary effect, in law, of dividing
the assets, if not for the purposes of the Partnership Act,
at least for the purposes of assessing income-tax. lie,
therefore, contended that the Hindu undivided family which
had ceased to exist in so far as these assets were concern-
ed, could not be assessed as such after January 1, 1946, the
date from which the partition was effective. The learned
Solicitor-General for the Department contended that the
argument itself involved the assumption that the assets were
not, in fact, divided, and since income-tax was payable at
the moment of time when income accrued, this income must be
taken to have accrued to the Hindu undivided family and its
subsequent partition into five or six shares did not affect
the position.
Before we deal with these arguments, it is necessary to
quote the operative portion of the document, which is as
follows:
" Re:-Partial partition of the Hindu Undivided Family of
Charandas Haridas of Ahmedabad.
We the undersigned Sheth Charandas Haridas by himself and as
the guardian of minors Rameshchandra Charandas, Anilkumar
Charandas and Gautamkumar Charandas and Shantaben Charandas
all residing in Shahibaug, Ahmedabad make this memorandum
(Nondh) that, we have a Hindu undivided family and Sheth
Charandas Haridas manages our family’s joint property as
Karta or Manager and all of us as members of the joint
undivided family are entitled to our joint undivided family
as Malik. Our family received a commission of Re. 0-1-11.
5112 from the Vijaya Mills Co., Ltd. and out of this
commission Sheth Charandas Haridas as Karta or Manager of
the family has given already a commission of one pie to
Pratima, the daughter of the family. So also out of the
commission of Re. 0-2-1/2 received by the family from the
Gopal
301
Mills Co., Ltd. Sheth Charandas Haridasas Karta and Manager
has given already to Pratima one pie commission. After
deducting these Re. 0-1-10. 5/12 and Re. 0-1-11 commission
remained. These commissions and other commission received
from various other mills have been partitioned orally by us
on Samvat Year 2002 Magsar Vadi 12, dated 31st December,
1945. By this partition we decided that whatever commission
fell due till 31-12-45 and which is received after 31-12-45
should be kept joint and in respect of the commission which
accrues from 1-1-46 and received after that date each of us
become absolute owner of his one-fifth share and therefore
from the date,i.e., from 1-1-46 these commissions cease to
be the joint property of our family. But it is our desire
that we should keep a memorandum for our memory of the oral
partial partition effected on Samvat Year 2002 Magsar Vadi
12, dated 31-12-45 pursuant to which we have partitioned the
commissions to be received by our family. Because of this
we keep this note."
The document no doubt mentions "a commission" in respect of
each of the six managing agencies, which commission was
divided by the document. The word "commission", however,
has been used in two different senses; sometimes it refers
to the amount of the managing agency commission to be
received by Charandas Haridas and sometimes to the right to
that commission which Charandas Haridas bad as a partner.
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The sole question is whether the source was effectively
divided for purposes of the Income-tax law, so that the
assessment could not be made upon a Hindu undivided family.
The law was stated by Mayne, and approved by the Privy
Council in Pichappa v. Chokalingam in the following words:
" Where a managing member of a joint family enters into a
partnership with a stranger the other members of the family
do not ipso facto become partners in the business so as to
clothe them with all the rights and obligations of a partner
as defined by the Indian Contract Act. In such a, case the
(1) A.I.R. 1934 P.C. 192.
39
302
family as a unit does not become a partner, but only such of
its members as in fact enter into a contractual relation
with the stranger: the partnership will be governed by the
Act."
Further, the Privy Council in Appovier v. Rama Subba Aiyan
(1) observed:
" Nothing can express more definitely a conversion of the
tenancy, and with that conversion a change of the status of
the family quad this property. The produce is no longer to
be brought to the common chest, as representing the income
of an undivided property, but the proceeds are to be enjoyed
in six distinct equal shares by the members of the family,
who are thenceforth to become entitled to those definite
shares."
The Bombay High Court quoted this passage, and stated that
there must be a division of the right as well as a division
of the property; and unless the division effected a
separation of the property into shares, it would remain only
as a separation of the income after its accrual and would
not affect the asset as such. In this view of the matter,
the Bombay High Court held that the asset continued to be
joint in spite of the division of the income after its
accrual.
In our opinion, here there are three different branches of
law to notice. There is the law of Partnership, which takes
no account of a Hindu undivided family. There is also the
Hindu law, which permits a partition of the family and also
a partial partition binding upon the family. There is then
the Income-tax law, under which a particular income may be
treated as the income of the Hindu undivided family or as
the income of the separated members enjoying separate shares
by partition. The fact of a partition in the Hindu law may
have no effect upon the position of the partner, in so far
as the law of Partnership is concerned, but it has full
effect upon the family in so far 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
the position of the partner Vis-a-vis the other partner or
partners. The Income-
(1) (1866) 11 M.I.A. 75.
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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 disrupted, 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
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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. Such division must,
of course, be effective so as to bind the members; but Hindu
law does not further require that the property must in every
case be partitioned by metes and bounds, if separate enjoy-
ment can otherwise be secured according to the shares of the
members. For an asset of this kind, there was no other mode
of partition open to the parties if they wished to retain
the property and yet hold it not jointly but in severally,
and the law does not contemplate that a person should do the
impossible. Indeed, the result would have been the same,
even if the dividing members had said in so many words that
they had partitioned the assets, because in so far as the
firms were concerned, the step would have been wholly
inconsequential.
The respondent suggested that the family could have
partitioned the managing agencies ’among the members of the
family by balloting them severally; but that would not have
been possible without a dissolution of the managing agency
firms and their reconstitution, which was not altogether in
the hands of Charandas Haridas. It was also suggested that
the managing agencies could have been allotted to Charandas
Haridas while the others took some other property, or a
receiver could have been appointed. No doubt, there were
many modes of partition which might have been adopted; but
the question remains that if the family desired to partition
these assets only and no more, could they have acted in some
other manner
304
to achieve the same result? No answer to this question was
attempted.
It is, therefore, manifest that the family took the fullest
measure possible for dividing the joint interest into
separate interests. There is no suggestion here that this
division was a mere pretence; nor has the Appellate Tribunal
given such a finding. The document was fully effective
between the members of the family, and there was factually
no Hindu undivided family in respect of these particular
assets. The assets at all times stood in the name of
Charandas Haridas, and looked at from the point of view of
the law of Partnership, the family had no standing. The
assets still are in the name of Charandas Haridas, and
looked again from the same viewpoint, the division has no
different signification. What has altered is the status of
the family. While it was joint, the Department could treat
the income as that of the family; but after partition, the
Department could not say that it was still the income of the
Hindu undivided family, when there was none. In the face of
the finding that this was a genuine document and not a sham,
and that it effectually divided the income and in the
circumstances, the assets, the question answers itself in
the negative, that is to say, that there were no materials
to justify the finding that the income in the share of the
commission agency of the Mills was the income of the Hindu
undivided family.
The appeal will be allowed. The respondents will pay the
costs of the two assessees here and below. There will be
only one set of costs here.
Appeal allowed.
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