Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
W. O. HOLDSWORTH AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF UTTAR PRADESH
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
04/09/1957
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
DAS, S.K.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
CITATION:
1957 AIR 887 1958 SCR 296
ACT:
Agricultural Income-tax-Will--Trust-Annuities--Land held by
trustee, whether on behalf of annuitants-Nature of interest
Of annuitants, whether joint-Indian Trusts Act, 1882 (II of
1882),S. 3.- U. P. Agricultural Income-tax Act, 1948 (U.
P. III Of 1949), SS. 2(11), 3, 11(1).
HEADNOTE:
Section 11( 1) of the U. P. Agricultural Income-tax Act,
1948, provided: "Where any person holds land, from which
agricultural income is derived, as a common manager
appointed under any law for the time being in force or under
any agreement or as receiver, administrator or the like on
behalf of persons jointly interested in such land or in the
agricultural income derived therefrom, the aggregate of the
sums payable as agricultural income-tax by each person on
the agricultural income derived from such land and received
by him, shall be assessed on such common manager, receiver,
administrator or the like, and he shall be deemed to be the
assessee in respect of the agricultural income-tax so
payable by each such person and shall be liable to pay the
same."
The appellants were the trustees of an estate settled on
trust under a will which inter alia provided that the
trustees were to take possession of the trust properties and
to manage the same with all the powers of absolute owners
and to pay the annuities to certain persons. The assessing
authority assessed the appellants to agricultural income-tax
upon the total agricultural income received by them,
overruling their contention that the tax should be computed
in accordance with the method of computation laid down in s.
11(1) of the Act and that they should be called upon to pay
the aggregate of the sums payable as agricultural income-tax
by each of the annuitants.
Held: (1) that the trustees who were the legal owners of
the trust property did not hold the land from which
agricultural income was derived, on behalf of the annuitants
and that each of the annuitants was separately or
individually interested in the agricultural income derived
from the land comprised in the trust estate to the extent of
the annuity payable to him.
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(2) that s. 11(1) of the Act was not applicable to the case
and that the appellants were liable to pay agricultural
income-tax upon the total agricultural income received by
them
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No.389 of 1956.
297
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
April 19, 1955, of the Allahabad High Court in Agricultural
Income-tax Miscellaneous Case No. 202 of 1952.
G. S. Pathak and G. C. Mathur, for the appellants.
K. L. Misra, Advocate-General of Uttar Pradesh, and C. P.
Lal, for the respondent.
1957. September 4. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
BHAGWATI, J.-This appeal with special leave against the
judgment of the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad raises
a question of the interpretation of s. 11(1) of the U.P.
Agricultural Income-tax Act, 1948, Act III of 1949
(hereinafter referred to as "the Act").
The appellants are the trustees of the estate settled on
trust under the last will and testament dated May 17,1917,
of one J. J. Holdsworth which, inter alia, comprised of a
certain zamindari estate known as the Lehra Estate situate
in the District of Gorakhpur, Uttar Pradesh.
The clauses of the will so far as they are relevant for the
purpose of this appeal provided that the trustees were to
take possession of all real property in the United Provinces
of Agra and Oudh and elsewhere in British India (including
the houses at Lehra and Gorakhpur and the grounds thereof)
and all live and dead stock in or about his estate in
British India or any buildings thereon and the contents of
any houses or stabling in British India belonging to him
(which was called his estate) and manage the same in all
respects and in such manner as they shall deem most advan.
tageous and with all the powers of absolute owners. The
trustees were to stand possessed of the net rents and
profits of the settled estate after payment of the
Government land revenue tax, and of all management expenses,
upon trust to pay thereout certain annuities to 12
annuitants therein mentioned. If the net rents and profits
of the said estate were less than seventy thousand rupees in
any year or if the said estate or any portion thereof shall
be sold at less than twenty years purchase of the net rent
of seventy thousand rupees or
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an equivalent proportion thereof in respect of the
proportion so sold, the annuities bequeathed as above and
for the time being payable except annuities Nos. (1), (2)
and (3) were to abate proportionately and no such annuitant
was entitled to have the deficiency of his or her annuity
made good out of the rents and profits of the said estate in
respect of any subsequent year. If there was no survivor
alive then it was to go William Orlando Holdsworth, the son
of the testator. Seven of the said annuitants died and at
the relevant period the following annuities werepayable:
(i) Mrs. J. C. Holdsworthpound 2,500/-
(ii) Mr. W. 0. Holdsworthpound 1,000/-
(iii) Miss Lucy Marion Holdsworthpound 50/-
(iv) Lt. Col. L. R. J. C. Wilkinsonpound 500/-
(v) Mr. Horace Claud Holdsworthpound 400/ -
The trustees entered upon the trust and managed the trust
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properties in accordance with the terms of the said will.
The Act came into force in 1949 and a notice of assessment
of agricultural income-tax was issued to the trustees for
the year 1357 Fasli (1949-50).
The Additional Collector, Gorakhpur, the assessing authority
for the area in question, by his order dated December 14,
1950, assessed the’ trustees to agricultural income-tax upon
the total agricultural income received by them, overruling
their contention that the tax should be computed in
accordance with the method of computation laid down in s.
11(1) of the Act and that they should be called upon to pay
the aggregate of the sums payable as agricultural income-tax
by each of the five annuitants.
The trustees preferred an appeal before the Agricultural
Income-tax Commissioner, Lucknow, who by an order dated
November 22, 1951, upheld the order of the Additional
Collector. He observed that the beneficiaries were neither
jointly interested in the land held by the trustees nor in
the agricultural income derived therefrom, and that the
agricultural income of the Lehra Estate accrued to the
trustees and not to the beneficiaries directly as it left
the hands of the various tenants who paid rent or from self-
cultivation that was done by the trustees themselves.,
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The trustees then moved an application under a. 24 (2) of
the Act before the Agricultural Income-tax Board, U.P., for
reference of certain questions of law to the High Court for
its decision. The said Board however decided to act, under
the third proviso to s. 24(2) of the Act and to considerthe
questions of law itself instead of referring them to the
High Court for its decision. In the exercise of this power
the Board held inter alia that the entire property vested in
the trustees and that the latter could not claim the benefit
of s. 11 of the Act and refused to make a reference.
The trustees moved an application under s. 24(4) of the Act
before the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad praying
that the High Court may be pleased to require the
Agricultural Income-tax Board, U.P., Lucknow, to state a
case and to refer to the High Court certain questions of law
arising in the case. The application was allowed by the
High Court on February 5, 1953, and an order was passed
directing the said Board to refer the relevant question of
law to the High Court.
Accordingly a statement of case was drawn up by the
Agricultural Income-tax Board and submitted to the High
Court and the following question of law was referred for its
decision:
" Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of the case
the trustees can be said to be holding land on behalf of
beneficiaries and can the beneficiaries be said to be
jointly interested in the land or in the agricultural income
derived therefrom within the meaning of Section 11 (1) of
the U.P. Agricultural Income-tax Act, 1948 ?"
The said reference was heard by the High Court and by its
judgment dated April 19, 1955, the High Court held that the
trustees could be said to be holding land on behalf of
beneficiaries but the beneficiaries could not be said to be
jointly interested in the land or in the agricultural income
derived therefrom within the meaning of s. 1 1 (1) of the
Act and accordingly answered the first part of the question
in the affirmative and the latter half in the negative.
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Thereupon the trustees filed an application before the High
Court under Art. 133(1) of the Constitution for leave to
appeal to this Court which was rejected with the result that
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the trustees applied for and obtained on April 16, 1956,
special leave to appeal against the judgment of the High
Court.
Section 11(1) of the Act which falls to be considered by us
runs as under:
" Where any person holds land, from which agricultural
income is derived, as a common manager appointed under any
law for the time being in force or under any agreement or as
receiver, administrator or the like on behalf of persons
jointly interested in such land or in the agricultural
income derived therefrom, the aggregate of the sums payable
as agricultural income-tax by each person on the
agricultural income derived from such land and, received by
him, shall be assessed on such common manager, receiver,
administrator or the like, and he shall be deemed to be the
assessee in respect of the agricultural income-tax so
payable by each such person and shall be-liable to pay the
same."
This section concerns itself with the mode of computation of
agricultural income-tax in certain cases. The charging
section is however s. 3 of the Act which talks of
agricultural income-tax and super-tax at the rate or rates
specified in the schedule to be charged for each year in
accordance with, and subject to the provisions of the
Act...... and rules framed under cls. (a), (b) and (c) of
sub-s. (2) of s. 44, on the total agricultural income of the
previous year of every -person. "1 Person " is defined in
s. 2(11) to mean an individual or association of
individuals, owning or holding property for himself or for
any other, or partly for his own benefit and partly for that
of another, either as owner, trustee, receiver, manager,
administrator, or executor or in any capacity recognized by
law, and includes an undivided Hindu family, firm or company
but not to include a local authority. According to the
above definition the trustees before us would be included in
the definition of " person " and would as such be liable to
agricultural income-tax under the
301
charging section. That liability to pay income-tax would
however be on the trustees as a "person" without anything
more. Where however s. 11(1) comes into operation the
agricultural income-tax would be assessed not on the
ordinary computation but on the computation specified
therein which has the effect of reducing the incidence of
the tax by reason of the person being liable to pay only the
aggregate of the sums payable as agricultural income-tax by
each of the persons jointly interested in such land or in
the agricultural income derived therefrom.
Two conditions are requisite before s. 11 (1) can come into
operation: (1) that the person holds land from which
agricultural income is derived, as a common manager
appointed under any law for the time being in force or under
any agreement or as receiver, administrator or the like on
behalf of other persons and (2) such persons should be
jointly interested in such land or in the agricultural
income derived therefrom. If both these conditions are
satisfied the person holding such land is liable to be
assessed in the manner specified in s. 11(1) of the Act and
the aggregate of the sums payable as agricultural income-tax
by each of these persons jointly interested on his share of
the agricultural income derived from such land and actually
received by him is to be assessed on such common manager,
receiver, administrator or the like, and the latter is to be
deemed the assessee in respect of the agricultural income-
tax so payable by each such person and is liable to pay the
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same.
It is to be noted that the primary liability for the payment
of agricultural income-tax is on the person who is
interested in the land or in the agricultural income derived
therefrom. The incidence of the tax is on that person and
the amount of tax is determined with reference to the
aggregate income derived by him. Inasmuch as however such
land is held by some other person who@ is a common manager,
receiver, administrator or the like on behalf of such person
and others jointly interested in such land or in the
agricultural income derived therefrom, the agricultural
income-tax is assessed on such common manager,
302
receiver, administrator or the like instead of the
assessment being made on each of such persons who is jointly
interested in such land or, in the agricultural income
derived therefrom. Section 11.(1) prescribes a mode of
assessing such common manager, receiver, administrator or
the like and he is deemed to be the assessee in respect of
agricultural income-tax so payable by each such person and
is liable to pay the same.
Such common manager, receiver, administrator or the like
would certainly be covered by the definition of person
contained in s. 2(11) of the Act because he would be holding
property for others as receiver, manager, administrator or
the like and would be liable to pay the agricultural income-
tax on the agricultural income derived by him from the land
which he thus held. If there was nothing more, the
incidence of the tax would be on the total income which has
come to his hands. But, in so far as he holds the land from
which agricultural income is derived as such common manager,
receiver, administrator or the like on behalf of the persons
jointly interested in such land or in the agricultural
income derived therefrom, the agricultural income-tax is
levied not on the computation of the whole agricultural
income which has come to his hands but if; limited to the
aggregate of the sums payable as agricultural income-tax by
each of the persons jointly interested in such land or in
the agricultural income derived therefrom and received by
him. The agricultural income-tax in such cases is
determined with reference to each of the persons jointly
interested in such land or in the agricultural income
derived therefrom, and the agricultural income-tax payable
by each of such persons is computed on the actual amount of
the agricultural income derived from such land and received
by him and the aggregate of the sums payable as agricultural
income-tax by each of such persons is assessed on such
common manager, receiver, administrator or the like with the
result that he pays agricultural income-tax which would be
substantially lower than what he would have otherwise had to
pay if the computation of such tax was on the total
agricultural income
303
derived from such land and come to his hands. Such common
manager, receiver, administrator or the like would in the
course of management or administration of such land debit to
the account of each such person an aliquot share of the
whole of the agricultural income-tax paid by him. If such
common manager, receiver, administrator or the like were
assessed on the total income derived from the land which
comes to his hands, the amount thus debited to each of such
persons would be larger than the amount which the latter
would have to pay by way of agricultural income-tax, if
agricultural income-tax was levied on the actual amount of
agricultural income derived from such land and received by
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him as falling to his share. This provision therefore is
designed to lower the incidence of the agricultural income-
tax upon each such person and such common manager, receiver,
administrator or the like by virtue of these provisions is
deemed to be the assessee in respect of agricultural income-
tax so payable by each such person and is made liable to pay
the same.
This position however is not available unless and until such
common manager, receiver, administrator or the like holds,
the land from which agricultural income is derived on behalf
of persons jointly interested in such land or in the
agricultural income derived therefrom. Such common manager,
receiver, administrator or the like should hold the land on
behalf of these persons and not on his own behalf. The very
words " on behalf of " predicate that the land is held by
such common manager, receiver, administrator or the like not
as the owner but as the agent or representative of these
persons and he manages or administers the same either in
accordance with law or the terms of the agreement arrived at
between the parties. There is no vestige of ownership in
him and all that he is entitled to do is to manage or
administer the land on behalf of persons who are jointly
interested in the agricultural income derived therefrom.
This could be predicated of receivers managers,
administrators or the like but cannot be predicated of
owners or
304
trustees who are equally with the manager, receiver,
administrator or the like included within the definition of
" person "- contained in s. 2(11) of the Act.
The case of the owner does not require any elaboration. He
holds the land on his own behalf and also for his own
benefit. Ho certainly cannot come within the scope of s. 1
1 (1) of the Act. The position of a trustee is also similar
to that of the owner. A trust is thus defined in English
Law:
" A trust in the modern and confined sense of the word, is a
confidence reposed in a person with respect to property of
which he has possession or over which he can exercise a
power to the intent that he may hold the property or
exercise the power for the benefit of some other person or
object." (Vide Halsbury’s Laws of England, Hailsham Ed.,
Vol. 33, p. 87, para. 140).
" The property affected by the confidence is called the
trust property or trust estate. It is usually in the legal
ownership or under the legal control of the trustee. The
cestui que trust is said to have a beneficial or equitable
interest in it." (Ibid p. 89 para. 142).
A trustee is thus usually the legal owner of the trust
property or the trust estate and holds it for the benefit of
the certui que trust.
Reliance was however placed upon an observation of Sir John
Romilly, M. R., in Lister v. Pickford (1)
" A trustee, who is in possession of land is so on behalf of
his cestuis que trust, and his making a mistake as to the
persons who are really his cestuis que trust cannot affect
the question."
What the Court was considering there was the question of
limitation and adverse possession and these observations
were made in that context. It is significant however to
note the further observations of the Master of the Rolls in
that very context at p. 583:
" Suppose that they had imagined bona fide that they
themselves were personally entitled to the property, and
that they were not trustees of it for anyone, it would,
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nevertheless, have-been certain that they would
(1) (1865)34 Beav. 576, 582; 55 E.R. 757.
305
have been trustees for the cestuis que trust, and no time
would run while they were in such possession. The legal
estate was vested in them, no other person could have
maintained an ejectment against them; they are bound to know
the law, they ought to have taken possession as soon as they
saw who were the real beneficiary devisees, and, being in
possession, they ought to have applied the proper proportion
of the rents for the benefit of such residuary devisees."
The passage quoted above makes it abundantly clear that the
legal estate is vested in the trustees and they hold it for
the benefit of the beneficiaries.
Whatever be the position in English Law, the Indian Trusts
Act, 1882 (II of 1882) is clear and categoric on this point.
Section 3 of that Act defines a Trust as an obligation
annexed to the ownership of property, and arising out of a
confidence reposed in and accepted by the owner, or declared
and accepted by him, for the benefit of another, or of
another and the owner: the person who accepts the confidence
is called the "trustee": the person for whose benefit the
confidence is accepted is called the "beneficiary": "the
beneficial interest" or "interest" of the beneficiary is his
right against the trustee as owner of the trust property;
the subject matter of the trust is called "trust property"
or "trust money."
These definitions emphasize that the trustee is the owner of
the trust property and the beneficiary only has a right
against the trustee as owner of the trust property. The
trustee is thus the legal owner of the trust property and
the property vests in him as such. He no doubt holds the
trust property for the benefit of the beneficiaries but he
does not hold it on their behalf. The expressions " for the
benefit of " and " on behalf of " are not synonymous with
each other. They convey different meanings. The former
connotes a benefit which is enjoyed by another thus bringing
in a relationship as between a trustee and a beneficiary or
cestui que trust, the latter connotes an agency which brings
about a relationship as between principal and agent between
the parties, one of whom is acting on behalf of another.
Section 11(1) therefore can only
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come into operation where the land from which agricultural
income is derived is held by such common manager, receiver,
administrator or the like on behalf of, in other words, as
agent or representative of, persons jointly interested in
such land or in the agricultural income derived therefrom.
Even though such persons were the beneficiaries cestui que
trust under a deed of trust, they would not be comprised
within the category of persons on whose behalf such land is
held by the trustees and the trustees would not be included
in the description of common manager, receiver,
administrator or the like so as to attract the operation of
s. 11(1). Trustees do not hold the land from which
agricultural income is derived on behalf of the benefi-
ciaries but they hold it in their own right though for the
benefit of the beneficiaries.
The beneficiaries are also not necessarily persons who are
jointly interested in such land or in the agricultural
income derived therefrom. The term "jointly interested" is
well-known in law and predicates an undivided interest in
the land or in the agricultural income derived therefrom as
distinguished from a separate or an individual interest
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therein. If on a true reading of the provisions of the deed
of trust the interest which is created in the beneficiaries
is a separate or individual interest of each of the
beneficiaries in the land or in the agricultural income
derived therefrom, merely because they have a common
interest therein, that cannot make that interest a joint
interest in the land or in the agricultural income derived
therefrom. The words "jointly interested" have got to be
understood in their legal sense and having been used in a
statute are not capable of being understood in a popular
sense as meaning a common interest or an interest enjoyed by
one person in common with another or others.
If regard be bad to the above construction put upon the
terms of s. 11 (1) of the Act, it follows that the
appellants who were trustees of the deed of trust in the
present case did not hold the land from which agricultural
income is derived as common manager, receiver, administrator
or the like on behalf of the annuitants
307
and the annuitants were not jointly interested in the land
or in the agricultural income derived therefrom with the
result that s. 11(1) of the Act did not come into operation
at all. The appellants were the legal owners of the trust
estate and did not hold the land from which agricultural
income was derived "on behalf of" the annuitants. Each of
the annuitants, moreover, was separately or individually
interested in the agricultural income derived from the land
comprised in the trust estate to the extent of the annuity
payable to him under the deed of trust and the interest of
one annuitant was not affected by whatever happened to the
interest of the other. There was thus no fulfilment of
either of the two conditions pre-requisite before s. 11(1)
of the Act could come into operation at all.
The learned judges of the High Court were therefore in
error in answering the first part of the question referred
to them in the affirmative, though their answer to the
latter part in the negative was correct. We are of opinion
that both the parts of the question should have been
answered by them in the negative. The ultimate result
however is the same and this appeal of the appellants is
therefore bound to fail. The appeal will accordingly stand
dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
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