Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, BOMBAYCITY II
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SHAKUNTALA AND TWO OTHERS ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
18/07/1961
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1966 AIR 719 1966 SCR (2) 871
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1966 SC1583 (7)
ACT:
Income-Tax--Shares registered in names of members of Hindu
undivided family-Undistributed income deemed to be
distributed dividend--Whether assessable in hands of family-
Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 (11 of 1922), s. 23A.
HEADNOTE:
A Hindu undivided family was the beneficiary of 1842 shares
in a company; but the shares were held in the names of
different members of the family. For the assessment year
1949-50 the Income-tax Officer applied the provisions of s.
23A of the Income-tax Act, 1922 (as it stood at that time)
and ordered that the undistributed portion of the assessable
income of the company in the previous year shall be deemed
to have been distributed as dividend among the shareholders.
The proportionate amount of dividend in respect of the 1842
shares after being grossed up was added to the income of the
joint family. The assessee-family contended that the divi-
dend deemed to have been distributed under s.23A should be
assessed in the hands of the shareholders and not in the
hands of the family.
Held, that the dividend deemed to have been distributed
under s. 23A of the Act could not be assessed in the hands
of the Hindu undivided family but could be assessed only in
the hands of the members of the family who were registered
shareholders of the company. Under the express words of the
section the artificial or notional income bad to be included
in the total income of the shareholder. The expression
"shareholder" in s.23A meant the person who was shown as a
shareholder in the register of the company. The section did
not talk of the beneficial owner of the share. The Hindu
undivided family was not a shareholder of the Company. The
fiction enacted by the legislature must be restricted to the
plain terms of the statute.
S. C. Cambatta v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay,
(1946) 14 I. T. R. 748 and Shree Shakti Mills Ltd., v.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay, (1948) 16 1. T. R. 187,
approved.
Howrah Trading Co. Ltd., v. Commissioner of Income-tax,
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Central Calcutta, (1959) 36 I.T.R. 215 and Oharandas Haridas
v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay, (1960) 39 1. T. R.
202, applied.
872
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos. 125, 231
and 447 of 1960.
Appeals from the judgment and order dated September 25,
1957, of the Bombay High Court of Income-tax References Nos.
30, 29 & 37/57, respectively.
K. N. Rajagopal Sastri and D. Gupta, for the appellant.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri and J. B. Dadachanji, for the
respondents.
1961. July, 18. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
S. K. DAS, J. These three appeals, with special leave of
this Court.. have been heard together. They arise out of
three Income-tax References made to the High Court of
Bombay, namely, Income-tax Reference No. 29 of 1957, Income-
tax Reference No. 30 of 1957 and Incometax Reference No. 37
of 1957. The facts are similar in the three cases and the
question of law which the High Court had to answer was the
same in each of the cases. The High Court gave its answer
in its leading judgment in. Income-tax Reference No. 29 of
1957, and the other two References were disposed of in
accordance with. that answer. For the purposes of these
appeals, it would be enough if we state the facts of
Reference No. 29 and then indicate the question which arose
for decision and the answer which the High Court gave to it.
One Nanalal Haridas was the karta of a Hindu undivided
family which admittedly was the beneficiary of 1842 shares
in a company called the Cotton Export and Import Limited
(hereinafter referred to as the Company). The shares were
held in the names of different members of the family as
given below.
873
No. of shares Name or names in which
they stand
877 Tribhuvandas Haridas
815 Nanalal Haridas
150 Nanalal Haridas and
Tribhuvandas Haridas
The Company was one in which the public were not
substantially interested. For the assessment year 1949-50
the Income-tax Officer concerned applied the provisions of
s. 23A of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 (as it stood
previous to :the amendment of 1955) and ordered that the
undistributed portion of the assessable income of the
Company of the relevant previous year, as computed for
income-tax purposes and reduced by the amount of income-tax
and supper-tax payable by it in respect thereof, shall be
deemed to have been distributed as dividend among the
shareholders as at the date of the relevant General Meeting
of the-Company. The:proportionate;amount of dividend of the
1842 shares, after being grossed up, came to Rs. 54,30,7/-.
This amount the Income-tax Officer added to the income of
the joint family. The assessee family claimed that the
dividend deemed to have been distributed under s. 23A should
be assessed in the hands of the shareholders, that is, the
persons in whose names the, shares stood registered in the
books of the Company, and not in the hands of the Hindu
undivided family though ;admittedly it was the beneficiary
of the shares. The Income-tax Officer and the Appellate
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Assistant,Commissioner rejected ,this contention. The
matter them went in appeal to the Income-tax Appellate
Tribunal. The Department contended before the Tribunal that
having regard to the scheme of s.23 A and the ordinary
dictionary meaning of the word "share holder, there was no
reason why the joint family should not be held to be the
shareholder within the meaning of s 23 A. The Tribunal by
its order dated February 15, 1957, expressed the view that
874
the interpretation of s. 23A for which the assessee
contended would defeat the very purpose of that section, but
held that it was bound by the decision of the Bombay High
Court in S. C. Cambatta V. Commissioner of Income,-tax,
Bombay (1). Accordingly, the Tribunal allowed the appeal
and directed the Income-tax Officer concerned to delete the
deemed dividend income from the income of the Hindu
undivided family. The Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay,
then moved the Tribunal to refer the following question of
law to the High Court of Bombay:
"Whether the dividend income of Rs. 54,307/-
is to be assessed in the hands of the
assessee, the Hindu undivided family?
The Tribunal was of the view that the question did arise out
of its order and made a reference to the High Court
accordingly.
The High Court by its order dated September 25, 1957,
answered the question in favour of the assessee. It held
that in respect of an income which was deemed to be
distributed under the provisions of s. 23A, the section in
terms provided that the proportionate share of the
shareholders in such distribution should be included in
their income; and as the Hindu undivided family was not and
could not be a registered shareholder of the Company, the
amount in question could not be treated as the income of the
Hindu undivided family under the provisions of that section.
The High Court re-affirmed the view it had expressed in its
earlier decision in S. C. Cambatta v. Commissioner of
Income-tax, Bombay (1).
The High Court having refused leave to appeal to this Court
from its decision in question, the Commissioner of Income-
tax, Bombay, applied to this Court for special leave and
having obtained
(1) (1946) 14 I.T.R. 748.
875
such leave has brought these appeals to this Court.
It is necessary now to read the relevant portion of s. 23A
as it stood prior to its amendment by the Finance Act, 1955.
"23A: Power to assess individual members of
certain companies.
(1) where the Income-tax Officer is
satisfied that in respect of any previous year
the profits and gains distributed as dividends
by any company up to the end of the sixth
month after its accounts for that previous
year are laid before the company in general
meeting are less than sixty per cent of the
assessable income of the company of that
previous year, as reduced by the amount of
income-tax and super-tax payable by the
company in respect thereof he shall, unless he
is satisfied that having regard to losses
incurred by the company in earlier years or to
the smallness of the profits made, the payment
of a dividend or a larger dividend than that
declared would be unreasonable, make with the
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previous approval of the Inspecting Assistant
Commissioner an order in writing that the
undistributed portion of the assessable income
of the company of that previous year as
computed for income-tax porposes and reduced
by the amount of income-tax and super-tax
payable by the company in respect thereof
shall be deemed to have been distributed as
dividend amongst the shareholders as at the
date of the general meeting aforesaid, and
thereupon the proportionate share thereof of
each shareholder shall be included in the
total income of such shareholder for the
purpose of assessing his total income
x x x
876
Provided- further that this- sub-section shall
not apply to any company in which the public
are substantially interested or to a sub-
sidiary company of such a company if the whole
of the share capital of-’ such subsidiary
company is held by the parent company or by
the nominees thereof."
The section in effect creates a fictional or notional
dividend-income which is not in fact received by the
shareholder. The notional dividend is deemed to have been
distributed’ as on the date on which the accounts of the
previous year were laid before the. company in a general
meeting. It is clear from the section that an order made
under it is not in itself an order of assessment-, it has to
be followed by an assessment on the shareholder either under
s. 23 or under s.34. Under the express terms of the section,
the artificial or notional income has to be included in the
total income of the shareholders for the purpose of
assessing his total income. The High Court has referred to
its earlier decision in S.C. Cambatta. Thee Commissioner of
Income tax, Bombay(1). That decision laid down that where a
share, stood registered in two or more names, the registered
holders treated as an association of persons must be
regarded I as the ,shareholder’ under s.23A and’ they must
be assessed accordingly. It further laid down that’s. 23A
did not- say anything about equities or beneficial owner-
ship; it was a procedural section not a charging section.
It created a notional incomes which was wholly artificial
and did not in fact exist in the pocket of any shareholder.
In a later provision in Shree-Shakti Mills Ltd. v.
Commissioner of,’ Income-tax, Bombay, City(2) the. same High
Co-art held that the, expression "shareholder" mentioned in
a. 18(5) of the Act meant the person who was shown as ’a
shareholder in the, register of the company and it was only,
the shareholder of a company who was entitled to the
procedure (1) (1946) 14 I.T.R. 748. (2) (1948) 16 I.T.R.
187.
877
of processing permissible under ss. 16 (2) and 18(5 of the
Act. This view was accepted by this Court in Howrah Trading
Co., Ltd. Commissioner of Income-tax, Central Calcutta (1)
where it said that no valid reason existed as to why the
expression ’shareholder’ as used in s. 18(5) should mean a
person other than the one denoted by the same expression in
the Indian Companies Act, 1913. A reference was made to the
decision of the Bombay High Court in Shree Shakti Mills Ltd.
v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay City(2) and other
decisions bearing on the subject. Similarly, we see no
reason why the expression ’shareholder’ in s. 23A should not
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have the same meaning, namely, a shareholder registered in
the books of the company. It would be anomalous if the
expression "shareholder’ has one meaning in S. 18(5) and a
different meaning in s. 23A of the Act ; for that would mean
that a Hindu undivided family treated as a shareholder for
the purpose of s. 23A would not be entitled to the benefit
of s. 18(5) of the Act.
The learned counsel for the appellant has urged two points
in support of his contention that the expression
"shareholder’ in s. 23A means the person who owns the share,
irrespective of the circumstance whether that person is
registered in. the books of the company as a shareholder or
not. His first point is that the very object of the section
is to prevent avoidance of super-tax by the shareholders of
a company, and if the beneficial owner of the shares is a
Hindu undivided family, that family will not come within the
purview of s. 23A, because a Hindu undivided family as such
cannot be a shareholder in a company. The argument is that
the narrow interpretation put on s.23 A will defeat the very
purpose of the section. The second point urged is that the
principle that a
(1) (1959) 36 I.T.R. 215. (2) (1948) 16 I.T.R. 187,
878
legal fiction must be carried to its logical conclusion
cannot be overlooked in construing s. 23A. The legal fiction
enjoined by the section is that the profits must be ’deemed
to have been distributed as dividend amongst the
shareholders as at the date of the general meeting". This
legal fiction must be carried to its logical conclusion by
holding that the dividend had been actually distributed and
received by the Hindu undivided family. It is pointed out
that if the same dividend were actually distributed by the
company, it would certainly be income in the hands of the
Hindu undivided family which would be liable to pay all
taxes on its income, whether actual or artificial.
We do not think that either of the two points urged by the
appellant is really decisive of the question. The question
is really one of interpretation of s. 23A, and we must
interpret s. 23A with reference to its own terms. The
section in express terms says that "the proportionate share
of each shareholder shall be included in the total income of
the shareholder for the purpose of assessing his total
income". The section does not talk of the beneficial owner
of the share. It talks of the shareholder only. Section
18(5) of the Act deals with grossing up of dividend and two
expressions occur therein "owner of the security" and the
’,’shareholder". So far as the expression "’owner of the
security" is concerned it may perhaps include a beneficial
owner ; but it has been decided by this Court that the-
expression "shareholder" in s.18 (5) means the shareholder
registered in the books of the company. As we have earlier
said, no good reason exists as to why the expression
"shareholder" in s. 23A shall not have the same meaning.
Sub-sections (3) and (4) of s. 23A also make the position
clear: they talk of members of the company and a Hindu
undivided family as such is not a member of the company.
879
The position of a Hindu undivided family vis-a-vis a
partnership was considered by this Court in Charandas
Haridas v. Commissioner of Income-tax Bombay (1) and
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay v. Nandlal Gandalal (?).
It is not disputed that the Hindu undivided family as such
was not a shareholder of the company in the present case.
Therefore, so far as the notional income is concerned, we
must go by the terms of s.23A and if there is any lacuna in
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the wording of the section, we cannot cure it in the guise
of interpretation. The question here is not one of deciding
the matter from the point of view of partnership law, or
Hindu law, as was the question in Commissioner of Income-
tax, Bombay v. Nandlal Gandalal (2) which led to a
difference of opinion. The question here is one of
interpretation only and that interpretation must, be based
on the terms of the section. The fiction enacted by the
Legislature must be restricted by the plain terms of’ the
statute. Nor do we see flow it can be said that the
interpretation put on s.23A that it is confined to a
shareholder registered in the books of’ the company defeats
the very purpose of the section. The section will still
apply to shareholders of the company and to their income
will be added the notional income determined under s. 23A.
We are unable to accept the argument that the principle that
a legal fiction must be carried to its logical conclusion
requires us to travel beyond the terms of the section or
give the expression "shareholder" a meaning which it does
not obviously bear.
For these reasons we are of the view that the High Court
correctly answered the question which was referred to it.
In view of that answer the High Court rightly held that the
second question referred to it did not fall for
(1) (1960) 39 1. T. R. 202,
(2) (1960) 40 I. T. R 1
880
consideration. The result, therefore, is that all these
three appeals fail and must be dismissed with costs ; one
hearing fee.
Appeals dismissed.