Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, ASSAM
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
NANDLAL AGGARWAL & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
17/11/1965
BENCH:
RAMASWAMI, V.
BENCH:
RAMASWAMI, V.
SIKRI, S.M.
SUBBARAO, K.
SHAH, J.C.
SIKRI, S.M.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
WANCHOO, K.N.
SATYANARAYANARAJU, P.
CITATION:
1966 AIR 902 1966 SCR (2) 918
ACT:
Indian Income-tax Act (11 of 1922), s. 40--Two guardians
appointed for two minors--Hindu undivided family or
individual, assessment.
HEADNOTE:
The two respondents were appointed guardians of the two
minor .sons after the death of their father and mother, by
an order of the Civil Court. Prior to his death the income
of the father’s business was assessed as an individual. The
guardians filed a return on behalf of the minors in the
status of a joint Hindu family. The Income-Tax Officer
assessed the guardians under s. 23(3) read with s. 41 of the
Income-tax Act. Later the Court allowed the guardians toll
separate accounts thereafter for each of the minors. The
Appellate Assistant Commissioner, on appeal against the
assessment, directed their separate individual assessments,
which was set aside by the Tribunal. On reference, the High
Court held against the Revenue. In this Court, the Revenue
contended that under s. 40 of the Act the guardians were
liable to pay tax as it would be leviable from minors if of
full age, and if the minors had been of full age they would
be assessed as Hindu undivided family.
HELD : Section 40 of the Act applied to this case, and
consequently the guardians ought to be assessed, treating
the minors as constituting a Hindu undivided family. [616 H]
On the death of the father, the minor sons constituted
a joint Hindu family and the business was joint family
property. Till some positive action was taken to a
partition of the property, it would remain joint family
property. The order appointing the two guardians could not
be read as having effected partition of the property. Apart
from the fact that the Court under the Guardianship Act has
no jurisdiction to partition property belonging to a join"
Hindu family, there are no words in the order of the Court
appointing the guardians to warrant such a finding. [616 E]
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The court’s order allowing the guardians to keep and
submit separate accounts came into existence after the
assessment year and after the Income-tax Officer had passed
his order. Therefore it could not have any effect on the
position prevailing in the relevant accounting year in
dispute. [616 D]
Srifudin Alimohammad v. Commissioner of Income-tax, 25
I.T.R. 237, referred to.
Commissioner of Income-tax v. Balvantrai Jethalal
Vaidya, 34 I.T.R. 187, approved.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 820 of
1964.
Appeal from the order dated July 4, 1961 of the Assam High
Court in Income-tax Reference No. 1 of 1961.
613
S.V. Gupte, Solicitor-General, N. D. Karkhanis, B. R. G.
K. Achar and R. N. Sachthey, for the appellant.
A. V. Viswantha Sastri and D. N. Mukherjee, for the
respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Sikri, J. This appeal in pursuance of a certificate
granted under s. 66A(2) of the Indian Income Tax Act, 1922,
hereinafter referred to as the Act, is directed against the
judgment of the High Court of Assam in a reference made to
it under s. 66(2) of the Act. The question referred to by
the Appellate Tribunal was "whether in the circumstances
of the case the Tribunal was justified in assessing the
income of the minors in the hands of the guardians as the
income of a Hindu undivided family."
The relevant facts out of which the reference arose are
as follows : Shri Kishanlal Agarwalla died intestate in
December 1950, leaving his widow and two minors, Basanta and
Ashok. Prior to his death he was being assessed as an
individual on the income arising from the business carried
on in the name of Shri Krishan Rice Mills, Tezpur. He was
governed by Mitakshra School of Hindu Law. The widow also
died in 1952. On the death of the widow an application was
made by Shri Nandlal Agarwalla to the Court of the District
Judge, Gauhati, for being appointed as a guardian of the
person and the properties of the two minors, Basanta and
Ashok. The District Judge, by his order dated June 1, 1953,
appointed him temporarily the guardian of the person and
properties of Basanta and Ashok, till the disposal of the
application, and transferred the file to the Subordinate
Judge, L.A.D., Nowgong. On December 15, 1953, the Sub-Judge
appointed Shri Dwarka Prasad Agarwalla and Shri Nandlal
Agarwalla guardians of the person and properties (as per the
schedule in the application) of Basanta and Ashok. The
guardians were directed to render accounts half yearly in
the months of March and September each year, i.e. by the
31st March and 30th September, each year until the minors
attained majority.
It is not necessary to mention what happened in the
assessment years 1951-52, 1952-53 and 1953-54 because
nothing turns on that. For the assessment year 1954-55,
which is the subjectmatter of this reference, a return was
filed in the status of a Joint Hindu Family by the two
guardians.
It appears that on March 25, 1958, the Sub-Judge,
Nowgong, passed the, following order
Sup.C.I/66--9
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614
"Account upto 30th September, 1957 filed. The
guardians file petition seaking permission for
showing the accounts of the two minors
separately.
Heard learned lawyer. The guardians are
hereby allowed to keep and submit separate
accounts henceforward for each of the minors
together with accounts of profits and loss and
separate expenses of each minor."
It seems to have been assumed that this order was also
operative during the accounting year 1953-54, but it is
clear that this order has no application to this accounting
year.
The Income Tax Officer, by his order dated October 19,
1957, assessed the guardians under s. 23 (3) read with s. 41
of the Act. The guardians filed an appeal before the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner contending that the
assessment was bad in law. The Appellate Assistant
Commissioner by his order dated May 16, 1956, set aside the
assessment and directed the Income Tax-Officer to reassess
after obtaining two separate returns from the appellants and
to frame two separate individual assessments. He came to
the conclusion that "the very fact that separate guardians
for the two minors were appointed by the Court with
directions to separately account for their accounts and the
expenses clearly establishes that they cannot also form an
H.U.F." By the time this order was passed, the Sub-Judge,
Nowgong, had passed the order dated March 25, 1958, and it
is clear that the Appellate Assistant Commissioner relied on
it. He further held that "the two minors should be taxed
through the Guardians in their individual share of profits
at the rate applicable to the individual incomes. For that
purpose the total income should be computed as it has now
been done. Two separate assessments should be made in the
names of two minors at the hands of the guardians in the
status of individual. I may note here that even the
deceased father was assessed in the status of an individual
and not in any way as an H.U.F."
The Income Tax Officer filed an appeal before the
Income Tax Appellate Tribunal and the Tribunal set aside the
order of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner and restored
the order of the Income Tax Officer with the modification
that the status of the assessee must be described as H.U.F.
The Appellate Tribunal held that the status of the two
minors is only that of H.U.F., as it existed before the
curatorship proceedings, and must continue to be so till at
least such time that the elder minor attains majority.
615
The guardians put in an application dated December 8, 1958,
before the Appellate Tribunal under s. 35 complaining that
the contention of the guardians that under the Hindu Law, by
which the minors are governed, their shares are specific and
determinate and they can only be assessed under s. 41 in the
manner and to the extent the assessment can be made on each
of the two minor children individually on whose behalf such
income was receivable by the guardians had not been adverted
to. The Appellate Tribunal, however, replied that the
contention referred to in the application had been omitted
to be dealt with in the order of the Tribunal as it became
academic in the light of the Tribunal’s decision that the
assessee was a H.U.F. The Tribunal refused to state a case
under s. 66(1) of the Act, but on being directed to do so by
the Assam High Court, it drew up a statement of-the case and
referred the question set out above. The High Court
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answered the question in the negative. The High Court held
that the guardians "received the shares of these minors in
the profit of the business as their income. By the order of
the Court, separate accounts in the name of the two minors
were opened in which the receipts and expenses relating to
each of the minors were separately adjusted. The guardians
were thus only liable to pay tax on the amount which they
received on behalf of these two minors separately. It
cannot be said that they were appointed guardians of any
joint family as such, so that their beneficiary was the
joint family as such and thus they were liable to pay tax on
the total income received by them on behalf of the Hindu
undivided family, their ward. The beneficiaries were the
two minors separately, The two minors are the wards of the
guardians. The guardians will, in our opinion, be liable to
pay tax on the separate income of each of the minors."
The learned Solicitor-General who appears on behalf of
the Revenue contends that under s. 40 the guardians were
liable to pay tax in like manner and to the same amount as
it would be leviable upon and recoverable from the minors if
of full age. He says that if the minors had been of full
age, they would have been assessed as a H.U.F. Mr. Sastri,
the learned counsel for the respondents, contends that the
minors would not have been assessed as a H.U.F. but would
have been assessed individually on their separate incomes.
He says that under s. 7 of the Guardians and Wards Act, no
guardian could have been appointed in respect of the
undivided interest of a minor and, therefore, the Court must
have proceeded on the basis that the properties had been
divided among the minors. He further points to the order
dated
616
March 25,1958, which shows that the interest of the minors
was separate.
It is not necessary to decide the question whether under
the Guardianship Act a guardian could have been appointed in
respect of the undivided interest of the minors. There is
authority for the proposition that when all the co-parceners
are minors, a guardian can be appointed for the whole
number. (see Bindaj Lusuman Triputikar v. Mathurabai) (1),
and Mayne’s Hindu Law (para 230, page 285). The point
whether the appointment of guardians was valid or not has
not been raised before the Income Tax authorities and we
must proceed on the basis that the appointment was valid.
Both the Revenue and the respondents have acted on this
assumption. The only question which can be raised is the
effect of the orders dated June 1, 1953, December 15, 1953
and March 25, 1958, on which Mr. Sastri strongly relies to
establish that the minors had individual incomes. As we
have already stated, the order dated March 25, 1958, came
into existence after the assessment year and after the
Income Tax Officer had passed his order. It cannot,
therefore, have any effect on the position prevailing in the
accounting year 1953-54.
We have already mentioned that Shri Kishanlal was
governed by the Mitakshra School of Hindu Law and it appears
to us that on his death his widow, and two minor sons,
Basanta and Ashok, constituted a joint Hindu family and the
business was joint family property. Till some positive
action was taken to have a partition of the property, it
would remain joint family property. We cannot read the
order dated December 15, 1953, of the Sub-Judge, Nowgong, as
having effected partition of the property. Apart from the
fact that the Court under the Guardianship Act has no
jurisdiction to partition property belonging to a joint
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Hindu family there are no words in the order to warrant such
a finding.
Reference was made to Saifudin Alimohammed v.
Commissioner of Income Tax(2) and Commissioner of Income Tax
v. Balwantrai Jethalal Vaidya(3). We agree with the view
expressed by Chagla, C.J., in the latter case in which he
explained certain observations made in the former case. If
a guardian carries on business on behalf of minors and
receives income on their behalf, S. 40 of the Act must be
applied.
In our opinion S. 40 plainly applies to the facts of
this case and consequently the guardians have to be
assessed, treating the
(1) I. L. R. 30 Bombay 152.
(3) 34 I. T. R .1 87.
(2) 25 I. T. R. 237,
617
minors as constituting a H.U.F. In the result the appeal is
accepted and the question referred to the High Court is
answered in the affirmative. The appellant will have his
costs here and in the High Court.
Appeal allowed.
618