Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2388 1994
Appeal (civil) 2394 1994
PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF WEALTH TAX
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
PRINCE MUFFAKHAM JAH BAHADUR CHAMLIJAN
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/12/2000
BENCH:
Y.K.Sabharwal, S.P.Bharucha, S.N.Hegde
JUDGMENT:
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J U D G M E N T
BHARUCHA, J.
These are appeals that relate to the same assessee,
Prince Muffakham Jah; they are in respect of the Assessment
years 1969-70 to 1975-76 and 1977-78. They raise the same
question. That question was referred on the application of
the Revenue by the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal to the
Andhra Pradesh High Court under Section 27(1) of the Wealth
Tax Act. The question reads thus : Whether on the facts
and in the circumstances of the case the Appellate Tribunal
was right in law in upholding the Commissioner of Income-Tax
(Appeals) order who directed the Wealth Tax Officer to
exclude the amount for the assessment year 1977-78 relating
to the life interest of the assessee added by the Wealth Tax
Officer in accordance with Rule 1B of the Wealth Tax Rules,
1957.
The principal judgment of the High Court was delivered
in the case of Commissioner of Wealth-Tax vs. Prince
Muffakkam Jah Bahadur [186 I.T.R. 421], which is challenged
in Civil Appeal Nos. 2388-2394 of 1994, and it was followed
in the orders which are challenged in Civil Appeal No.3603
of 1997.
The assessee is a member of the family of the late
Nizam of Hyderabad. One of the several trusts created by
the late Nizam for the benefit of his heirs, relations and
others was the Prince Mukaram Jah, Prince Muffakkam Jah and
Princess Dur-Re- Shewar Trust. The trustees thereof,
pursuant to the directions contained therein, constructed a
house on specified land. The assessee was entitled under
the terms of the trust to live in that house during his life
time without being required to pay any rent.
In his wealth tax return for the assessment years in
question the assessee did not include the value of the life
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interest so created in his favour for the reason that he had
no alienable interest in the house. The Wealth-Tax Officer,
however, added the value of the said life interest in the
assessees wealth, applying for the purpose the provisions
of Rule 1B of the Wealth Tax Rules. The appellate authority
in first appeal held to the contrary, and the Tribunal in
further appeal agreed. From out of the order of the
Tribunal the question aforestated was referred to the High
Court.
The High Court, in the impugned judgment, took the
view that the said life interest could not be called an
asset for the purposes of the Wealth-Tax Act, inasmuch as
the assessees interest was only to live in the house as a
licensee and he could not dispose of his interest or deal
with it in any manner for his benefit. He had also no
proprietary interest therein.
The High Court followed its decision in R.C. No.69 of
1969, disposed of on 5th November, 1971. In that matter,
the Shahebzadi Anwar Begum Trust created by the late Nizam
was in issue. It provided that the trustees thereof would
allow the Shahebzadi to wear and use specified jewels on
ceremonial or festive occasions and other specified jewels
for ordinary everyday use. The trustees were empowered to
convert any part of the jewellery fund into an income
yielding investment, the income whereof was to be paid to
the Shahebzadi. In the event of the death, divorce or
remarriage of the Shahebzadi, the trustees were required to
sell the jewels and invest the sale proceeds and pay out the
income to the children and other remote issue of the
Shahebzadi and Prince Muazzam Jah. The question before the
High Court was whether the right to wear the jewellery was
an asset and whether its value could be included in the
Shahebzadis wealth for the purposes of wealth tax. The
High Court concluded that the Shahebzadis interest was of a
permissive nature and could not be called property, however
widely the expression was interpreted. This was for the
reason that the Shahebzadi had no proprietary interest of
any sort in the jewellery and she could not lend it.
Besides, the trustees were given the right to withdraw the
jewellery from her and sell it without her consent. Her
interest in the jewellery was limited to being allowed to
wear it if the trustees did not withdraw it from her.
It was common ground before the High Court that Rule
1B was not workable in the circumstances of the present case
because the formula therein could not be applied if income
did not accrue to an assessee from his life interest. The
High Court agreed, therefore, with the Tribunal that Rule 1B
could not be applied for determining the value of said life
interest. It added, This of course does not mean that an
asset should be excluded altogether from computation. Even
if the said rule does not apply, an asset must still be
valued and must be included in the wealth of the assessee if
it satisfies Section 7(1).
Section 2 of the Wealth Tax Act sets out the
definitions of the expressions used therein. Clause (e)
thereof defines assets to include property of every
description, movable or immovable. Clause (m) thereof
defines net wealth to mean the amount by which the
aggregate value, computed in accordance with the provisions
of the Wealth Tax Act, of all the assets, wherever located,
belonging to the assessee on the valuation date, including
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assets required to be included in his net wealth as on that
date under the Wealth Tax Act, is in excess of the aggregate
value of all the debts owed by the assessee. Section 7 sets
out how the value of assets is to be determined. So far as
it is relevant here, it says :
S.7. Value of assets how to be determined- (1)
Subject to any rules made in this behalf, the value of any
asset, other than cash, for the purposes of this Act, shall
be estimated to be the price which in the opinion of the
Assessing Officer it would fetch if sold in the open market
on the valuation date.
Our attention was drawn by learned counsel for the
Revenue to several judgments of this Court and the High
Court at Bombay in support of his contention that the said
life interest was an asset of the assessee and it had to be
taken into account in assessing his net wealth.
In Ahmed G.H. Ariff & Ors. Vs. Commissioner of
Wealth-Tax, Calcutta [(1970)76 I.T.R. 471], this Court was
concerned with the right of a beneficiary to receive an
aliquot share of the net income of properties comprised in a
wakf-alal- aulad created by a Muslim governed by the Hanafi
school of Mohammedan law. It was held to be property
covered by the definition of assets in the Wealth-Tax Act,
so that the capitalized value of that right was assessable
to wealth-tax. This Court said that property was a term
of the widest import and signified every possible interest
which a person could hold or enjoy. It had been held to
extend even to a mahantship or shebaitship which combined
the elements of office and property. This Court referred to
the judgment of the Bombay High Court in Commissioner of
Wealth-tax, Bombay City II vs. Purshottam N. Amersey and
anr. [(1969)71 I.T.R. 180]and expressed its concurrence
with the view that the charge of wealth-tax under Section 3
of the Wealth Tax Act on net wealth included every
description of property of the assessee, movable and
immovable, barring exceptions expressly stated. The High
Court had rightly observed that when the statute used the
words if sold in the open market it did not contemplate
actual sale or the actual state of the market but only
enjoined that it should be assumed that there was an open
market and the property could be sold in such market and, on
that basis, its value had to be found out. It was an
hypothetical case which was contemplated.
The judgment of the Bombay High Court in the case of
Purshottam N. Amersey was upheld by this Court in
Purshottam N. Amarsay & Anr. vs. Commissioner of
Wealth-Tax, Bombay City II [(1973) 88 I.T.R. 417] and
observations of the kind set out above were repeated. In
response to the argument on behalf of the assessee that the
Court had not considered the possibility of an asset not
having any value whatsoever, it was said that what this
Court had ruled in Ariffs case was that even if the
property in question was incapable of being sold in the
market for the reason that it was a personal asset, the
interest of the assessee had to be valued by the Wealth-Tax
Officer.
On behalf of the assessee the view taken by the High
Court was commended, namely, that the said life interest was
not an asset because it only conferred a personal,
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inalienable right to reside on the assessee. It was only a
licence and, therefore, not an asset.
It is difficult, having regard to what has been laid
down by this Court in Ariffs case and Amerseys case, to
uphold the decision of the High Court. The assessee has, by
reason of the said life interest, a right to reside in the
house in question for the duration of his life. There can
be no question but that such a right to reside, though it be
personal and inalienable, is property which would have a
market in an assumed market place; in other words, that an
assumed somebody would acquire this personal right to reside
in the property during the lifetime of the assessee and pay
a price for it.
The alternative contention advanced before this Court
on behalf of the assessee was as follows: When a rule
provides a method of valuation of an asset, it is only that
rule that can be applied and no further recourse to Section
7 is permissible. Rule 1B in the instant case indicated how
a life interest was to be valued. It had been applied by
the Wealth-Tax Officer. That application was correct.
Because the said life interest yielded no actual income to
the assessee, the value of the said life interest so
calculated was zero.
Rule 1B, in so far as it is relevant, reads thus :
(1) For the purposes of sub-section (1) of Section 7,
the market value of the life interest of an assessee shall
be arrived at by multiplying the average annual income that
accrued to the assessee from the life interest by 1/14141 =
1 where I represents the annual premium for a whole-life
insurance without profits on the life of the life tenant for
unit sum assured as specified in the Appendix to those
rules, and d is equal to 1/1 plus, i being the rate of
interest.
As has been noted, it was agreed by learned counsel
appearing on behalf of both the assessee and the Revenue
before the High Court that Rule 1B was not workable in the
circumstances of the present case, which is clearly correct
for it is applicable only to an income yielding life
interest. It is, therefore, difficult to see how it can now
be argued on behalf of the assessee that Rule 1B was
correctly applied. In any event, we are in agreement with
the High Court, and indeed, with the Tribunal before it,
that even if Rule 1B did not apply, the said life interest,
if an asset, had still to be valued and be included in the
wealth of the assessee, which is what Section 7 required.
In the absence of a rule which can apply to the valuation of
a particular asset, that asset must be valued in the
ordinary way, by determining what it would fetch if it were
sold in an assumed market; the value being what an assumed
willing purchaser would pay for it. This is how the said
life interest must be assessed, upon the assumption that the
assessees personal right to reside in the property during
his life time is salable. For the reasons aforestated, the
judgment and orders under challenge are set aside. The
question aforequoted is answered in the negative and in
favour of the Revenue. The said life interest shall now be
valued for each of the Assessment Years in question in the
manner set out above. No order as to costs.
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