Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
N. V. NARENDRANATH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF WEALTH TAX, ANDHRA PRADESH,HYDERABAD
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
07/03/1969
BENCH:
RAMASWAMI, V.
BENCH:
RAMASWAMI, V.
SHAH, J.C.
GROVER, A.N.
CITATION:
1970 AIR 14 1969 SCR (3) 882
1969 SCC (1) 748
CITATOR INFO :
R 1971 SC 33 (8)
F 1976 SC 109 (14,15,33,36)
R 1978 SC 504 (7)
R 1985 SC 716 (7)
ACT:
Wealth Tax Act, 1957, section 3-Family consisting of sole
surviving Hindu coparcener, his wife and daughters, whether
assessable as Hindu Undivided Family or as individual-
Assessee receiving property from coparcenary on partition-
Character of.
HEADNOTE:
In respect of his assessment to wealth tax for the
assessment years 1957-58, 1958-59 and 1959-60, the appellant
filed returns in the status of a Hindu Undivided Family.
His family at the material time consisted of himself, his
wife and two minor daughters. The appellant claimed to be
assessed in the status of a Hindu Undivided Family inasmuch
as the wealth returned consisted of ancestral property
received or deemed to have been received by him on partition
with his father and brothers. The Wealth Tax Officer did
not accept the contention of. the appellant and assessed him
as an individual. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner
confirmed this view. However the Appellate Tribunal held
that the appellant should be assessed in the status of Hindu
Undivided Family but the High Court, upon a reference,
disagreed with the view of the Appellate Tribunal and held
that as the appellant family did not have any other male
coparcener, all the assets forming the ’subject matter of
the returns filed by the appellant belonged to him as an
individual and not to a Hindu Undivided Family.
On appeal to this Court,
HELD:Allowing the appeal:
The status of the appellant was rightly determined as that
of a Hindu ,Undivided Family by the Appellate Tribunal. The
expression "Hindu Undivided Family" in the Wealth Tax Act is
used in the sense in which a Hindu joint family is
understood in the personal law of Hindus. Under the Hindu
system of law a joint family may consist of a single male
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member and his wife and daughters and there is nothing in
the scheme of the Wealth Tax Act to suggest that a Hindu
Undivided Family as an assessable unit must consist of at
least two male members. [886 C]
Under s. 3 of the Wealth Tax Act not a Hindu coparcenary but
a Hindu Undivided Family is one of the assessable legal
entities. A Hindu joint family consists of all persons
lineally descended from a common ancestor, and includes
their wives and unmarried daughters. A Hindu coparcenary is
a much narrower body than the Hindu joint family; it in-
cludes only those persons who acquire by birth an interest
in the joint or coparcenary property, these being the sons,
grand-sons and great grand-sons of the holder of the joint
property for the time being. [885 F-H]
Kalyanji Vithaldas v. Commissioner of Income Tax, 5 I.T.R.
90, Commissioner of Income Tax v. Gomedalli Lakshminarayan
[1935] 3 T.R. 367 considered.
88 3
Commissioner of Income Tax v. A. P. Swamy Gomedalli, 5
I.T.R. 416, Attorney General of Ceylon v. A.R. Arunachallam
Chettiar [1957] A.C. 540, Gowali Buddanna’s [1960] 6 I.T.R.
203 referred to.
T.S. Srinivasan v. Commissioner of Income Tax 60, I.T.R.
36 distinguished.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 1477 to
1479 of 1968.
Appeals from the judgment and order dated November 30, 1964
of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Case Referred No. 49 of
1962.
S.T. Desai and K. Jayaram, for the appellant (in all the
appeals).
D.Narsaraju, G. C. Sharma, R. N. Sachthey and B. D.
Sharma, for the respondent (in all the appeals).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Ramaswami, J. These appeals are brought by certificate from
the judgment of the Andhra Pradesh High Court, dated 30th
November, 1964 in Reference Case No. 49 of 1962.
N. V. Rangarao, the father of the appellant, was the holder
of an impartible estate called the "Munagala Estate" in the
Krishna District in the State of Andhra Pradesh. This
estate was abolished under the Madras Estates (Abolition and
Conversion into Ryotwari) Act, 1948, and compensation under’
section 45 of the Act was paid severally to the appellant,
his father and his brothers. Other properties belonging to
the joint family of the appellant, his father and brothers
were also partitioned between them from time to time. The
assets forming the subject of reference to the High Court
consisted of investments made from the compensation amount
received by the appellant in securities, shares etc. and
also other assets such as deposits in Banks. The appellant
filed returns for the assessment years 1957-58, 1958-59 and
1959-60 in the status of a Hindu Undivided Family. The
appellant’s family during the material time consisted of
himself, his wife and his two minor daughters and there was
no other male member. The appellant claimed to be assessed
in the status of a Hindu Undivided Family inasmuch as the
wealth returned consisted of ancestral property received or
deemed to have been received by him on partition with his
father and brothers. The Wealth Tax Officer did not accept
the contention of the appellant and assessed him as an
individual for the assessment years 1957-58, 1958-59 and
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1959-60. On appeal to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner
of Wealth Tax the finding that he must be assessed as an
individual was confirmed.
L 11 Sup.CI/69-7
884
The Income Tax Appellate Tribunal however on appeal by the
appellant held that he should be assessed in the status of a
Hindu Undivided Family. Thereupon, the Commissioner of
Wealth Tax applied to the Tribunal to state a case to the
High Court under section 27(1) of the Wealth Tax Act (Act
No. 27 of 1957) (hereinafter called the Act). The Tribunal
accordingly referred the following question of law for the
opinion of the High Court :
"Whether the status of the assessee was
rightly determined as Hindu Undivided Family
?"
The High Court disagreed with the view of the Appellate Tri-
bunal and hold that as the appellant’s family did not have
any other male coparcener all the assets forming the subject
matter of the returns filed by the appellant belonged to him
as an individual and not to a Hindu Undivided Family. The
High Court answered the question in favour of the appellant
and against the Commissioner of Wealth Tax.
It is necessary at this stage to set out the relevant
provisions of the Act as they stood at the material time :-
"Section 2 : In this Act, unless the context
otherwise requires-
(e)"assets" includes property of every
description, movable or immovable, but does
not include-
(i) agricultural land and growing crops,
grass or standing trees on such land;
(ii) any building owned or occupied by a
cultivator or receiver of rent or revenue out
of agricultural land
(iii)animals;
(ix)a right to any annuity in any case of
where the terms and conditions relating
thereto preclude the commutation of any
portion thereof into a lump sum grant;
(v)any interest in property where the
interest is available to an assessee for a
period not exceeding six years;
(m)"net wealth" means the amount by which
the aggregate value computed in accordance
with the provisions of this Act of all the
assets, wherever located,
885
belonging to the assesses on the valuation
date, including assets required to be included
in his net wealth as on that date under this
Act, is in excess of the aggregate value of
all the debts owed by the assesses on the
valuation date other than,-
(i)debts which under section 6 are not to
be taken into account; and
(ii)debts which are secured on, or which
have been incurred in relation to, any asset
in respect of which wealth-tax is not payable
under this Act.
Section 3 Charge of Wealth-tax 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,
1957, a tax (hereinafter referred to as
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wealth-tax) in respect of every individual,
Hindu Undivided Family and company at the rate
or rates specified in the Schedule.
Section 5 : Exemption in respect of certain
assets:
(i)Wealth-tax shall not be payable by an
assesses in respect of the following assets
and such assets shall not be included in the
net wealth of the assessee-
(ii)the interest of the assessee in the
coparcenary property of any Hindu Undivided
Family of which he is a member".
Under s. 3 of the Wealth Tax Act not a Hindu coparcenary but
a Hindu Undivided Family is one of the assessable legal en-
tities. A Hindu joint family consists of all persons
lineally descended from a common ancestor, and includes
their wives and unmarried daughters. A Hindu coparcenary is
a much narrower body than the Hindu joint family; it
includes only those persons who acquire by birth an interest
in the joint or coparcenary property, these being the sons,
grand-sons and great grand-sons of the holder of the joint
property for the time being. In Kalyanji Vithaldas v.
Commissioner of Income Tax,(1) Sir George Rankin observed :
"The phrase "Hindu Undivided Family" is used
in the statute with reference, not to one
school only of
(1) 5 I.T R. 90.
886
Hindu law, but to all schools; and their
Lordships think it a mistake in method to
begin by pasting over the wider phrase of the
Act the words "Hindu co-parcenary", all the
more that it is not possible to say on the
face of the Act that no female can be a
member".
The first question involved in this case is whether the
status of the appellant was that of a Hindu undivided family
consisting of himself, his wife and his daughters. In our
opinion, there is no warrant for the contention of the
respondent that there must be at least two male members to
form a Hindu Undivided Family as a taxable unit. The
expression "Hindu Undivided Family" in the Wealth Tax Act is
used in the sense in which a Hindu joint family is
understood in the personal law of Hindus. Under the Hindu
system of law a joint family may consist of a single male
member and his wife and daughters and there is nothing in
the scheme of the Wealth Tax Act to suggest that a Hindu
Undivided Family as an assessable unit must consist of at
least two male members.
The next question is whether the assets which came to the
share of the appellant on partition ceased to bear the
character of joint family properties and became the
individual property in his hands. In this connection, a
distinction must be drawn between two classes of cases where
an assesses, is sought to be assessed in respect of
ancestral property held by him : (1) where property not
originally joint is received by the assessee and the
question has to be asked whether it has acquired the
character of a joint family property in the hands of the
assessee and (2) where the property already impressed with
the character of joint family property comes into the hands
of the assessee as a single coparcener and the question
required to be considered is whether it has retained the
character of joint family property in the hands of the
assessee or is converted into absolute property of the
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assessee. In Kalyanjis(1) case there were six appeals
presented before the Judicial Committee by six partners of
the firm of M/s. Moolji Sicka and Co., viz., Moolji,
Purshottam, Kalyanji, Chaturbhuj, Kanji and Sewdas. Moolji,
Purshottam and Kalyanji each had a son or sons from whom he
was not divided. It was found by the appellate tribunal
that the capital supplied by them to the partnership
business belonged to them in their individual capacities and
was their self acquired property. Hence the income of the
firm which had to be assessed to super-tax was the separate
income of each of these partners. Chaturbhuj had a wife and
daughter but no son. Kanji and Sewdas, sons, of Moolji,
were married men but neither had a son. It was found by the
appellate tribunal that Chaturbhuj Kanji and Sewdas had
(1) 5 I.T.R. 90
887
received by gift from Moolji their respective share capital
in the firm, that the, share capital belonged to them in
their individual capacities and was self acquired. The
question at issue was whether the existence of a son and a
wife or a wife and a daughter made the income of the
partners the income of the Hindu Undivided Family rather
than the income of the individual partner. The Judicial
Committee held that though the income was from an ancestral
source, the fact that each partner had a wife or daughter
did not make that income from ancestral source income of the
Hindu Undivided Family of the partner, his wife and
daughter.
Different considerations would be applicable, where property
already impressed with the character of joint family
property comes into the hands of a single coparcener. The
question to be asked in such a case is whether the property
retains the character of joint family property or whether it
sheds the character of joint family property and becomes the
absolute property of the single coparcener. In Commissioner
of Income Tax v. Gomedalli Lakshminarayan,(1) the property
was ancestral in the hands of the father and the son had
acquired an interest in it by birth. There was a subsisting
Hindu Undivided Family during ’the life-time of the father
and that family did not come to an end on his death. On
these facts, the Bombay High Court held that the income
received from the property was liable to super-tax as the
income of the Hindu Undivided Family in the hands of the son
who was the sole surviving male member of the Hindu
Undivided Family in the year of assessment. The reasoning
was that the property from which income accrued originally
belonged to a Hindu Undivided Family and on the death of the
father it did not cease to be property of that Hindu
Undivided Family but continued to belong to that Hindu
Undivided Family and its income in the hands of the son was,
therefore, assessable as income of the Hindu Undivided
Family. There was a vital distinction between the facts of
this case and the facts in Kalyanjis case(1). This
distinction was not noticed by the Judicial Committee in
Kalyanji’s case(2) when it observed that the Bombay High
Court "arrived too readily at the conclusion that the income
was the income of the family". When Gomedalli’s case(1) was
carried on appeal the Judicial Committee once again failed
to notice the distinction and wrongly reversed the decision
of the Bombay High Court holding that the facts of the case
were not materially different from the facts in Kalyanji’s
case(2) [See the decision of the Judicial Committee in
Commissioner of Income Tax v. A. P. Swamy Gomedalli(3)].
(1)(1935) 3 I.T.R. 367.
(2) 5 I.T.R. 90.
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(3) 5 I.T.R. 416.
888
The recent decision of the Judicial Committee in Attorney
General of Ceylon v. AR. Arunachalam Chettiar(1) is
important,. One Arunachalam--Nattukottai Chettiar and his
son constituted a joint family governed by the Mitakshara
school of Hindu law. The father and son were domiciled in
India and had trading and other interests in India, Ceylon
and Far Eastern countries. The undivided son died in 1934
and Arunachalam became the sole surviving coparcener in the
Hindu Undivided Family to which a number of female members
belonged. Arunachalam died in 1938 shortly after the Estate
Ordinance No. 1 of 1938 came into operation in Ceylon. By
section 73 of the Ordinance it was provided that property
passing on the death of a member of the Hindu Undivided
Family was exempt from payment of estate duty. On a claim
to estate duty in respect of Arunachalam’s estate in Ceylon,
the Judicial Committee held that Arunachalam was at his
death a member of the Hindu Undivided Family, the same
undivided family of which his son, when alive, was a member
and of which the continuity was preserved after Aruna-
chalam’s death by adoptions made by the widows of the family
and since the undivided Hindu family continued to persist,
the property in the hands of Arunachalam as a single
coparcener was the property of the Hindu Undivided Family.
The Judicial Committee observed at page 543 of the Report
"...........though it may be correct to speak
of him as the owner’, yet it is still correct
to describe that which he owns as the joint
family property. For his ownership is such
that upon the adoption of a son it assumes a
different quality; it is such, too, that
female members of the family (whose members
may increase) have a right to maintenance out
of it and in some circumstances to a charge
for maintenance upon it. And these are
incidents which arise, notwithstanding his so-
called ownership, just because the property
has been and has not ceased to be joint family
property. Once again their Lordships quote
from the judgment of Gratiaen, J. (2) "To my
mind it would make a mockery of the undivided
family system if this temporary reduction of
the coparcenary unit to a single individual
were to convert what was previously joint
property belonging to an undivided family into
the separate property of the surviving
coparcener". To this it may be added that it
would not appear reasonable to impart to the
legislature the intention to discriminate, so
long as the family itself subsists, between
property in the hands of a single copar-
(1) [1957] A.C. 540. (2) (1953) 55 C.N.L.R.
496-501.
889
cener and that in the hands of two or more
coparceners".
The Judicial Committee rejected the contention of the
appellant that since a single coparcener had full power over
the property ,held by him, he must be held to be the
absolute owner and observed that fact that he possesses a
large power of alienation
"..............appears to their Lordships to
be an irrelevant consideration. Let it be
assumed that his power of alienation is
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unassailable : that means no more than that he
has in the circumstances the power to alienate
joint family property. That is what it is
until he alienates it and, if he does not
alienate it, that is what it remains. It is
only by analysing the nature of the rights of
the members of the undivided family, both
those in being and those yet to be born, that
it can be determined whether the family
property can properly be described as joint
property’ of the undivided family."(1)
The basis of the decision was that the property which was
the joint family property of the Hindu Undivided Family did
not cease to be so because of the "temporary reduction of
the coparcenary unit to a single individual". The character
of the property, viz., that it was the joint property of a
Hindu Undivided Family, remained the same.
The same principle was applied by this Court in Gowali Bud-
danna’s (2 ) case. In that case, one Buddappa, his wife,
his two unmarried daughters and his unmarried son, Budanna,
were members of a Hindu Undivided Family. Buddappa died and
after his death the question arose whether the income of the
properties held by Buddanna as the sole surviving coparcener
was assessable as the individual income of Buddanna or as
the income of the Hindu Undivided Family. It was held by
this Court that since the property which came into the hands
of Buddanna as the. sole surviving coparcener was originally
joint family property, it did not cease to belong to the
joint family and income from it was assessable in the hands
of Buddanna as income of the Hindu Undivided Family. In the
course of the judgment Shah, J. speaking for the Court
examined the decision of the Judicial Committee in
Kalyanji’s case(") and Gomedalli’s (4 ) and pointed out that
there was a clear distinction between the two classes of
cases :
"It may however be recalled that in Kalyanji
Vithaldas’s case(3) the income assessed to tax
belonged separately to four out of six
partners; of the remaining two
(1) (1966) 60 I.T.R. 293.
(2) 60 I.T.R. 293.
(3) 5 I.T.R. 90.
(4) (1935) 3 I.T.R. 367.
890
it was from an ancestral source, but the fact
that each such partner had a wife or daughter
did not make that income from an ancestral
source income of the undivided family of the
partner, his wife and daughter. In Gomedalli
Lakshminarayan’s case(1), the property from
which income accrued belonged to a Hindu
Undivided Family and the effect of the death
of the father, who was a manager, was merely
to invest the rights of a manager upon the
son. The income from the property was and
continued to remain the income of the
undivided family. This distinction, which had
a vital bearing on the issue falling to be
determined, was not given effect to by the
Judicial Committee in A. P. Swami Gomedalli’s
case(1).
At page 302 Shah, J. referred to the decision of the
Judicial Committee in Arunachalam’s (2) case and concluded
as follows:-
"Property of a joint family, therefore, does
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not cease to belong to the family merely
because the family is represented by a single
coparcener who possesses rights which an owner
of property may posesss. In the case in hand
the property which yielded the income
originally belonged to a Hindu Undivided
Family. On the death of Budappa, the family
which included. a widow and females, born in
the family was represented by Buddanna alone,
but the property still continued to belong to
that undivided family and income received
therefrom was taxable as income of the Hindu
undivided family".
In the present case the property which is sought to be taxed
in the hands of the appellant originally belonged to the
Hindu Undivided Family belonging to the appellant, his
father and his brothers. There were joint family properties
of that Hindu Undivided Family when the partition took place
between the appellant, his father and his brothers and these
properties came to the share of the appellant and the
question presented for determination is whether they ceased
to bear the character of joint family properties and became
the absolute properties of the appellant. As pointed out by
the Judicial Committee in Arunachalam’s case(2) "it is only
by analysing the nature of the rights of the members of the
undivided family, both those in being and those yet to be
born, that it can be determined whether the family property
can properly be described as "joint property of the
undivided family". Applying this test it is clear that,
though in the absence of male issue the dividing coparcener
may be properly described in a sense as the owner of the
properties, that upon the adoption of a son or birth of a
son to him, it would assume a different quality. It con-
(1) (1935) 3 I.T.R. 367.
(2) [1957] A.C. 540.
891
tinues to be ancestral property in his hands as regards his
male issue for their rights hid already attached upon it I
and the partition only cuts off the claims of the dividing
coparceners. The father and his male issue still remain
joint. The same rule would apply even when a partition had
been made before the birth of the male issue or before a son
is adopted, for the share which is taken at a partition by
one of the coparceners is taken by him as representing his
branch. Again the ownership of the dividing coparcener is
such "that female members of the family may have a right to
maintenance out of it and in some circumstances to a charge
for maintenance upon it". (See Arunachalam’s(1) case). It
is evident that these are the incidents which arise because
the properties have been and have not been ceased to be
joint family properties. It is no doubt true that there was
a partition between the assessee, his wife and minor
daughters on the one hand and his father and brothers on the
other hand. But the effect of partition did not affect the
character of these properties which did not cease to be
joint family properties in the hands of the appellant, Our
conclusion is that when a coparcener having a wife and two
minor daughters and no son receives his share of the joint
family properties on partition, such property in the hands
of the coparcener belongs to the Hindu Undivided Family of
himself, his wife and minor daughters and cannot be assessed
as his individual property. It is clear that the present
case falls within the ratio of the decision of this Court in
Gowali Buddanna’s case (2) and the Appellate Tribunal was
right in holding that the status of the respondent was that
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of a Hindu Undivided Family and not that of an individual.
On behalf of the respondent reference was made to the
decision of this Court in T. S. Srinivasan v. Commissioner
of ’Income Tax(3), and it was contended that the decision
proceeded on the basis that property received by the
coparcener on partition cannot be regarded as property of a
Hindu Undivided Family if he has merely a wife or daughter
and no son. It is therefore necessary to examine the
material facts and find out what is the ratio decidendi of
that case. The appellant was a member of the Hindu
Undivided Family with his father and brothers. As a result
of partial partition of properties belonging to the Hindu
Undivided Family the appellant received certain shares and
with tsese shares as nucleus he acquired house properties,
shares and deposits. His first son was born on 11 th
December, 1952 and it was common ground that the conception
of the child must have taken place some time in March, 1952.
For the assessment year 1953-54 the relevant accounting year
being the financial year 1st April 1952 to 31st March, 1953,
the
(1) [1957] A.C. 540.
(2) 60 I.T.R. 293.
(3) 60 I.T.R. 36.
8 92
appellant claimed that the income from the assets should be
assessed in the hands of the Hindu Undivided Family
consisting of himself and his son which, according to him,
had come into existence in or about March, 1952 when the son
was conceived. The Income Tax Officer recognised the Hindu
Undivided Family only from the date of the birth of the son,
viz. 11th December, 1952 and assessed the income till 11th
December, 1952 in the hands of the appellant as an
individual. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner and the
Tribunal upheld this view on appeal. Before the High Court
the question debated was whether the Hindu Undivided Family
came into existence in or about March 1952 when the son was
conceived and whether the assesses could be assessed in the
status of an individual for any part of the relevant
accounting year., The question was answered against the
assessee by the High Court. The assessee appealed to this
Court and the contention of the appellant was that according
to the doctrine of Hindu law a son conceived is in the same
position as a son actually in existence. The argument was
rejected by this Court which held that the Hindu Undivided
Family did not come into existence on the conception of the
son as claimed by the appellant, but came into being when
the son was actually born. It was suggested on behalf of
the respondent that the decision of this case must be taken
to be implicitly, if not explicitly that there was no Hindu
Undivided Family prior to the date of the birth of the son.
But we do not think that any such implication can be raised.
The case of the appellant throughout the course of the
proceedings was that the Hindu Undivided Family came into
existence for the first time in or about March, 1952 when
the son was conceived and it was not his case at any time
that a Hindu Undivided Family was in existence prior to the
conception of the son. Indeed, it was common ground between
the parties that there was no Hindu Undivided Family in
existence prior to the conception of the son. The only
dispute was whether the Hindu Undivided Family came into
existence for the first time when the son was conceived as
claimed by the assessee or whether it came into existence
when the son was born as claimed by the Income Tax
Department. The appellant relied on the doctrine of Hindu
law that the son conceived is in the same position as the
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son born and the respondent contended that this doctrine was
inapplicable. That was the only question raised before this
Court which it was called upon to decide and which in fact
it decided.- The question whether there was in any event
even without a son conceived or born, a Hindu Undivided
Family consisting of the appellant and his wife and whether
the properties received on partition belonged to that Hindu
Undivided Family was neither raised nor argued before this
Court which had no occasion to consider it. The decision of
T. S. Srini-
893
vasan’s case(1) has therefore no bearing on the question now
presented for determination in the present case.
For the reasons already.expressed we hold that the status of
the appellant was rightly determined as that of a Hindu Un-
divided Family by the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal and the
question of law referred to the High Court must be answered
ill the affirmative and against the Commissioner of Wealth
Tax. These appeals are accordingly allowed with costs. One
hearing fee.
R.K.P.S. Appeals allowed,
(1) 60 I.T.R. 36.