Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M/S. LAKSHMICHAND BAIJNATH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, WEST BENGAL
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
13/11/1958
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SARKAR, A.K.
CITATION:
1959 AIR 341 1959 SCR Supl. (1) 415
CITATOR INFO :
R 1982 SC 760 (12)
ACT:
Income Tax-Partition in Hindu undivided family-Proceedings
under S. 25A of the Indian Income-tax Act-Scope-Receipt of
amount in accounting year-Assessee’s Plea of capital receipt
rejected-Liability to tax as business receipt-lndian Income-
tax Act, 1922 (XI of 1922), S. 25A.
HEADNOTE:
For the assessment year 1946-47 the appellant, a Hindu
undivided family carrying on business, filed a petition
before the income-tax Officer, under s. 25A of the Indian
Income-tax Act, 1922, claiming that there had been a
partition in the family on April 24,1945. As regards the
income assessable under s. 23 Of the Act, the appellant’s
case regarding six sums aggregating to Rs. 2,30,346 shown in
the accounts as the sale proceeds of ornaments, was that at
the partition the jewels of the family were sold and that
the price realised therefrom was invested in the business.
The Income-tax Officer held that the partition was true and
that the family had become divided into five groups, but as
regards the amount of Rs. 2,30,346 aforesaid he rejected the
explanation given by the appellant as to how the amount came
to be received and held that the amount was not the proceeds
of the family jewels sold but represented concealed profits
of the business. He accordingly included the said amount in
the taxable income. The appellant’s contentions, inter
alia, before the Appellate Tribunal were (1) that the order
passed under s. 25A of the Act by the Income-tax Officer
must be held to have decided the factum of a partition in
the family as well as the ’possession and division of the
jewels, as set up by the appellant, and that it was not open
to the Department to contend that the amount in question did
not represent the value of the family jewels; and (2) that,
in any case, there was no evidence to show that the amount
represented undisclosed profits.
Held, that when a claim is made under s. 25A of the Indian
Income-tax Act, 1922, the points to be decided by the
Incometax Officer are whether there has been a partition in
the family, and, if so, what the-definite portions are in
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which the division had been made among the members or groups
of members. The question as to what the income of the
family assessable to tax under s. 23(3) was, would be
foreign to the scope of an enquiry under s. 25A, and any
finding thereon would not be conclusive in assessment
proceedings under S. 23.
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Held, further, that the assessee in the present case having
failed to explain satisfactorily the truth of what is a
credit in business accounts, the Income-tax Officer was
entitled to draw the inference that the amount credited
represents in reality a receipt of an assessable nature.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 271-272 of
1955.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
June 19, 1953, of the Calcutta High Court in Income-tax
Reference Nos. 6 & 7 of 1950.
A.V. Viswanatha Sastri, A. K. Dutt, S. K. Kapur and Sukumar
Ghose, for the appellant.
C.K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India, R. Ganapathy
Iyer, R. H. Dhebar and D. Gupta, for the respondent.
1958. November 13. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
VENKATARAMA AIYAR, J.-The appellant was a Hindu undivided
family carrying on business as piecegoods merchants in the
city of Calcutta. The present proceedings relate to the
assessment of its income for the year 1946-47, the previous
year thereto being June 12, 1944, to April 24, 1945. In the
course of the assessment, the appellant filed a petition
under s. 25-A of the Incometax Act, 1922, claiming that
there had been a partition in the family on April 24,1945.
On May 27,1945, the In. come-tax Officer enquired into both
these matters, the factum of partition and the quantum of
income charge. able to tax, and pronounced orders thereon on
June 30, 1945. On the petition under s. 25-A, he held that
the partition was true, and that the family had become
divided into five groups. As regards the income assessable
under s. 23, the dispute related to six sums aggregating to
Rs. 2,30,346 shown in the accounts as the sale proceeds of
ornaments. The case of the appellant with reference to
these sums was that at the partition the jewels of the
family were sold in six lots, that the price realised
therefrom was invested in the business, and that the credits
in question related thereto. The Income-tax Officer
declined to accept this explanation. He observed that while
the books of the appellant
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showed that what was sold was ornaments, the accounts of
Chunilal Damani to whom they were stated to have been sold,
showed sale of gold. He also pointed out that while the
weight of the ornaments according to the partition
agreement, Ex. A, was 3422 tolas, the weight of gold which
was actually sold to the purchaser was 3133 tolas. The
explanation given by the appellant for this discrepancy was
that the jewels in question had come down to the family
through several generations, and were not pure. The Income-
tax Officer rejected this explanation, because he held that
the weight which was actually deducted for impurities in the
accounts of the purchaser was almost negligible, and that
what was sold was thus pure gold and not gold in old family
jewels. He also remarked that the sales were in round
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figures of 500 tolas, and that "if the assessee had been
taking old ornaments broken or unbroken for sale it is
inconceivable that on three occasions out of six he took
gold weighing 500 tolas in round figure." He also referred
to the fact that there was no list of the family jewels, and
that there was nothing in the family accounts to show what
jewels were held by the family. He accordingly held that
the story of sale of family jewels was not true, and that
the sum of Rs. 2,30,346 represented concealed profits of the
business, and he included the said amount in the taxable
income. He also followed it up by an order imposing tax on
the appellant under the Excess Profits Tax Act.
The appellant took both these orders in appeal to the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner who again went into the
matter fully, and observed that the appellant had been
changing his version as to the true character of the sales
from time to time. Dealing with the discrepancy of 289
tolas between the weight shown in the partition agreement,
Ex. A, and that appearing in the accounts books of Chunilal
Damani, he remarked that -while the explanation of the
appellant before the Income-tax Officer was that it was due
to alloy and brass in the jewels, before him the position
taken up was that it was due to pearls and stones which
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had been removed from the jewels, and that the gold
contained in the jewels was pure gold. He did not accept
this explanation as, in his opinion, the jewels which were
stated to have been in existence for three or four
generations should have contained much more of alloy than
was shown in the accounts of the purchaser. He also
considered that the sale of gold in round figures of 250 or
500 tolas was a circumstance which threw considerable doubt
as to the truth of the appellant’s version. In the result,
he confirmed the findings of the Income-tax Officer, and
dismissed the appeals.
Against these orders, the appellant appealed to the
Appellate Tribunal. There, he sought to rely on a certain
proceedings book as showing that the family jewels were
really broken up, and that what was sold to Chunilal Damani
was the gold thus separated. As this proceedings book forms
the real sheet-anchor of the appellant’s contention before
us, it is necessary to refer to the facts relating thereto
in some detail. On February 20, 1945, the members of the
family entered into an agreement, Ex. A, to divide their
joint proper. ties among the five branches, of which it was
constituted. In sch. B to this document are set out the
jewels to be divided, and their total weight is, in round
figure, 3422 tolas. Then we have the proceedings book, and
that purports to be a record of the decisions taken by the
members of the family from time to time for implementing Ex.
A. The minutes of the meeting held on February 23, 1945,
show that the pearls and stones imbedded in the jewels were
to be removed and divided among the members, and that a
goldsmith called Inderban was engaged for the purpose of
breaking up the jewels. Then we have the minutes of a
meeting held on February 28, 1945, and therein, it is
recited that the weight of the pearls, stones and copper
removed was, again in round figure, 289 tolas, and deducting
this out of 3422 tolas being the weight of the jewels set
out in Ex. A, the gold which was available for partition
was 3133 tolas. It is recorded that this quantity should be
sold in the market and the sale proceeds credited in the
capital accounts of the business. And then we have the last
of the proceedings dated April 21,
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1945, which record that gold weighing 3133 tolas was sold
and the price credited in the accounts. Now, if these
minutes are genuine and give a correct picture as to what
really took place, they would go a long way to support the
version given by the appellant as to how he came by the sums
making up a total Rs. 2,30,346. Quite naturally, therefore,
the appellant applied to the Tribunal to receive the
proceedings book in evidence, and the ground given in
support of the application was that it had been filed before
the Income-tax Officer but had not been considered by him.
Then the question was raised as to whether the proceedings
book was, in fact, produced before the Incometax Officer.
The argument of the appellant was that the decision taken at
the meeting dated April 21, 1945, which forms the concluding
portion of the book had been translated into English at the
instance of the Income-tax Officer, the original being in
Hindi, that the said translation was marked Ex. B and
contained the endorsement of the Officer " Original produced
", and that accordingly the book must have been produced
before the Officer. But the Tribunal was not impressed by
this argument. It observed that the book iselft had not
been initialled by the Officer, and that though the minutes
of the meeting dated April 21, 1945, were genuine, there was
no certainty that when it was shown to the Income-tax
Officer it was contained in the book now produced, that such
minutes could have found a place in another book as well,
and that, therefore, the book which was sought to be
admitted before it in evidence was not proved to be the book
which was produced before the Officer. It was also of the
opinion that the minutes of the previous meetings could not
have been shown to the Officer. It accordingly refused to
receive the book in evidence, and relying on the other
circumstances mentioned in the order of the Income-tax
Officer and the Appellate Assistant Commissioner, it held
that the sum of Rs. 2,30,346 was not the proceeds of the
family jewels sold but secret profits made by the appellant
in business.
Another contention raised by the appellant before
420
the Tribunal was that in the proceedings under s. 25A, the
Income-tax Officer had held, after making enquiry, that the
partition set up by it was true, and that as according to
the appellant, the partition consisted in the division,
inter alia, of family jewels weighing 3422 tolas, the
Income-tax Officer must be held to have decided that the
family was in possession of the jewels mentioned in Ex. A
and had divided them in the manner set out in Ex. B, and
that as that order had become final, it must conclude the
present question in favour of the appellant. The Tribunal
repelled this contention on the ground that the order under
s. 25A only decided that there was partition in the family,
and that it had no bearing on the issues which arose for
decision in the assessment proceedings. In the result, both
the appeals were dismissed.
Pursuant to an order of the High Court of Calcutta dated
December 7, 1950, passed under s. 66(2) of the Act, the
Tribunal referred the following questions for its Opinion: -
(1)" Whether the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal was bound by
the findings of fact of the Income-tax Officer relating to
the nature and division of the assets of the joint family in
question which he arrived at in his enquiry under Section
25A(l) of the Indian Income-tax Act ?
(2)Whether there was any material or evidence upon which the
taxing authorities could legally hold that the amount of Rs.
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2,30,346 (Rupees two lakhs thirty thousand three hundred and
forty-six) represented undisclosed profits of the accounting
year in question ? "
The reference was heard by Chakravarti, C. J., and Lahiri,
J., who by their judgment dated June 19, 1953, answered the
first question in the negative and the second in the
affirmative. The appellant then filed an application under
s. -66A(2) for leave to appeal to this Court, and that
having been dismissed, has preferred the present appeals on
leave granted by this Court under Art. 136.
Mr. Viswanatha Sastri, learned counsel for the appellant,
raised the following contentions:
421
(1) In view of the order of the Income-tax Officer under s.
25A, it was not open to the Department to contend that the
sum of Rs. 2,30,346 does not represent the value of family
jewels.
(2)The finding of the Income-tax authorities that the said
amount represents concealed profits of business is not
supported by legal evidence and is, in any event, perverse.
(3)There is no evidence that the amount in question
represents profits of business, and it was therefore not
chargeable to tax under the provisions of the Excess Profits
Tax Act.
(1)On the first question, the appellant relied on certain
observations in the order of the Income-tax Officer passed
under s. 25A as amounting to a decision that the family had
the jewels mentioned in Ex. A, and that what was actually
divided was only the price received therefor. Now, when a
claim is made under s. 25A, the points to be decided by the
Income-tax Officer are whether there has been a partition in
the family, and if so, what the definite portions are in
which the division had been made among the members or groups
of members. The question as to what the income of the
family assessable to tax under s. 23(3) was, would be
foreign to the scope of an enquiry under s. 25A. That
section was, it should be noted, introduced by the Indian
Income-tax (Amendment) Act, 1928 (3 of 1928), for removing a
defect which the working of the Act as enacted in 1922 had
disclosed. Under the provisions of the Act as they stood
prior to the amendment, when the assessee was an undivided
family, no assessment could be made thereon if at the time
of the assessment it had become divided, because at that
point of time, there was no undivided family in existence
which could be taxed, though when the income was received in
the year of account the family was joint. Nor could the
individual members of the family be taxed in respect of such
income as the same is exempt from tax under s. 14(1) of the
Act. The result of these provisions was that a joint family
which had become divided at the time of the assessment
escaped tax altogether. To
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remove this defect, s. 25A enacted that until an order is
made under that section, the family should be deemed to
continue as an undivided family. When an order is made
under that section, its effect is that while the tax payable
on the total income is apportioned among the divided members
or groups, all of them are liable for the tax payable on the
total income of the family. What that tax is would depend
on the assessment of income in proceedings taken under s.
23, and an order under s. 25A would have no effect on that
assessment. It is in this context that we must read the
observations in the order under s. 25A relied on for the
appellant. In fact, that order does not expressly decide
that the family had the jewels mentioned in Ex. A, and that
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they were converted into cash as claimed by the appellant.
Nor could such a finding be implied therein, when regard is
had to the scope of the proceedings under s. 25A and to the
fact that the order under s. 23(3) holding that the sum of
Rs. 2,30,346 did not represent the value of the family
jewels sold was passed on the same date as the order under
s. 25A and by the very same officer.
(2)The next question is and that is what was really pressed
before us-whether the sum of Rs. 2,30,346 represents the
price of family jewels sold or whether it is concealed
business profits. That clearly is a question of fact the
finding on which is open to attack in a reference under s.
66 only if it could be shown that there is no evidence to
support it or that it is perverse. Now, the contention of
Mr. Viswanatha Sastri for the appellant is that the finding
that it is concealed profits was reached by the Income-tax
Officer and by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner by
ignoring the very material evidence furnished by the
proceedings book, and that the Appellate Tribunal had
erroneously refused to receive the book in evidence. This
contention raises two controversies: (i) Was the proceedings
book which was produced before the Tribunal the book which
was produced before the Income-tax Officer ? (ii) If it was,
were the minutes of the meeting prior to April 21, 1945,
relied on by the appellant before the Income-tax Officer ?
Whatever
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view one might be inclined to take on the former question,
so far as the latter is concerned, it is perfectly plain
that they were not. On May 27, 1947, the enquiry was held
on both the petitions under s, 25A and on the quantum of
income assessable to tax under s. 23(3). Exhibit D is an
extract from the order sheet of the Income-tax Officer, and
it runs as follows:
"Regarding credits amounting to Rs. 2,30,346-6-3 in the a/c.
Udoyaram Bhaniram the representatives state that besides the
evidence produced, which are noted below, they are not in a
position to produce any further evidence,
(i) Account books of the assessee containing the details of
the amounts aggregating the aforesaid sum.
(ii) Sale statements rendered by Chunilal Damani,copies of
which have been filed.
(iii)Roker of Chunilal Damani containing entries for
purchase of gold, sold by the assessee family along with
Surajrattan Bagri the accountant of Chunilal Damani.
(iv) Statement of Lakhmichand Bhiwaniwalla and Pannalal
Bhiwaniwalla, member of the assessee family."
This statement is signed by the counsel for the appellant.
It is clear from the above that the proceedings book was not
relied on as evidence on the character of the receipts
making up the sum of Rs. 2,30,346. The fact appears to be
that the appellant produced the proceedings book in support
of his petition under s. 25A for the purpose of establishing
that there was a completed partition, and relied only on the
minutes of the meeting held on April 21, 1945, in proof
thereof, and that is why that alone was translated in
English and marked as Ex. B. It is also to be noted that
there is no reference in the order of assessment by the
Income-tax Officer under s. 23(3) to the minutes of the
meetings prior to April 21, 1945, and that they were not
even translated, as was the record of the meeting dated
April 21, 1945. The obvious inference is that they were not
relied on by the appellant, and were therefore not
considered by the Officer. It is also
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significant that the order -of the Income-tax Officer refers
to sale of ornaments broken or unbroken. The story that the
gold which was separated from the jewels after removing the
pearls and stones was melted and sold in quantities of 250
or 500 tolas, which was the argument pressed before us, was
not put forward before him.
It is argued that in the appeal against the order of the
Income-tax Officer the ground was definitely taken that the
proceedings book had been produced before him, and that it
was also prominently mentioned in a petition supported by
affidavit filed by the appellant. But the order of the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner does not deal with this
matter either, and it is inconceivable that he would have
failed to consider it if it had been pressed before him. It
is also to be noted that the appellant who had obtained a
return of the proceedings book from the Income-tax Officer
did not file it before the Appellate Assistant Commissioner,
nor did he move for its admission in evidence. Apart from
taking the grounds to which we were referred, the appellant
appears to have presented his case before the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner precisely on the same lines on which
lie pressed it before the Income-tax Officer. In view of
these facts, we are unable to hold that in refusing to admit
the proceedings book as evidence in the appeal, the
Appellate Tribunal acted perversely or unreasonably.
Indeed, counsel for the appellant did not contend in the
High Court that the Tribunal had acted illegally or
unreasonably in refusing to admit the proceedings book in
evidence. That being so, it cannot be said that the finding
given by the Tribunal on an appreciation of the facts and
circumstances already set out is unsupported by evidence or
is perverse.
The position may thus be summed up: In the business accounts
of the appellant we find certain sums credited. The
explanation given by the appellant as to how the amounts
came to be received is rejected by all the Income-tax
authorities as untenable. The credits are accordingly
treated as business receipts which are chargeable to tax.
In V. Govindarajulu
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Mudaliar v. The Commissioner of Income-tax, Hyderabad (1),
this Court observed:
" There is ample authority for the position that where an
assessee fails to prove satisfactorily the source and nature
of certain amounts of cash received during the accounting
year, the Income-tax Officer is entitled to draw the
inference that the receipts are of an assessable nature."
That is precisely what the Income-tax authorities have done
in the present case, and we do not find any grounds for
holding that their finding is open to attack as erroneous in
law.
(3)Lastly, the question was sought to be raised that even if
the credits aggregating to Rs. 2,30,346 are held to be
concealed income, no levy of excess profits tax can be made
on them without a further finding that they represented
business income, and that there is no such finding. When an
amount is credited in business books, it is not an
unreasonable inference to draw that it is a receipt from
business. It is unnecessary to pursue this matter further,
as this is not one of the questions referred under s. 66(2).
In the result, the appeals fail and are dismissed with
costs.
Appeals dismissed.
(1) [1958] 34 I.T.R. 807, 810.
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