Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, GUJARAT
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ASHOKBHAI CHIMANBHAI
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
20/10/1964
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
SUBBARAO, K.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 1343 1965 SCR (1) 758
CITATOR INFO :
D 1968 SC 75 (8)
ACT:
Income-tax Act, (11 of 1922), ss. 3 and 4-Trading firm-
Profits of individual partners-Time of accrual.
HEADNOTE:
The assessee was a Hindu undivided family. Its manager was
a partner in a firm and the family was entitled to his share
of the profits. The partnership agreement provided that the
accounts of the firm should be adjusted every calendar year,
that is, on the 31st December of each year. On November 12,
1955, by a deed of partition, the family and its property
were divided and it was declared that the manager became
exclusively entitled to the profits in the partnership from
1st January 1955. In proceedings for assessment for 1955-
56, the corresponding previous year for the assessee being
27th October 1954 to 14th November 1955, the assessees
contended that the share in the profits of the partnership
should not be included in its taxable income because (i)
under the partition deed the profits belonged to the quondam
manager exclusively from 1st January 1955 and, (ii) since
the partnership made up its accounts at the end of the
calendar year, the assessee had no interest in the share of
the profits which accrued exclusively to its quondam manager
at the end of the year. The Income-tax Officer rejected the
contentions. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner and the
Appellate Tribunal held that since there was a disruption in
the family only on 12th November 1955, the profits had to be
apportioned between the assessee and its manager. The High
Court on a reference, held in favour of the assessee
accepting the second contention. The Commissioner appealed
to the Supreme Court.
HELD : The profits accrued to the quondam manager only on
31st December 1955, though they were the result of
transactions spread over the entire period of the calendar
year 1955. Since on that date the assessee had, because of
the partition deed, no interest in the profits or any part
thereof, the assessee was not liable to pay any tax on those
profits. 1766 C-D; 769 D-E]
In the gross receipts of a business day after day or from
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transaction to transaction lie embedded or dormant profit or
loss. On such dormant profits or loss, undoubtedly, taxable
profits, if any, of the business Will be computed. But
dormant profits cannot be equated with accrued profits
charged to tax under ss. 3 and 4 of the Income-tax Act,
1922. The concept of accrual of profits of a business
involves the determination by the method of accounting at
the end of the accounting year or any shorter period
determined by law; and unless a right to the profits comes
into existence, there is no accrual of profits. In the case
of a partnership, where, by a covenant binding between the
parties, the accounts are to be made at stated intervals,
the right of a partner to demand his share of the profits
does not arise until the contingency under the covenant
which gives rise to that right, has arisen. [762 E-F; 765 H,
766 A]
E. D. Sassoon & Co. Ltd., v. Commissioner of Income-tax,
Bombay City, [1955], 1 S.C.R. 313, followed.
In re : The Spanish Prospecting Co. Ltd. [1911] 1 Ch. 92 and
Bhogilal Laherchand v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay
City, 28 I.T.R. 919, referred to.
759
Turner Morrison & Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax,
West Bengal [1953] S.C.R. 520 and Dulichand Laxminarayan v.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Nagpur, [1956] S.C.R. 154,
explained.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 817 of
1963.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated April 17, 1961 of
the Gujarat High Court in I.T.R. 21 of 1960.
K. N. Rajagopal Sastri, R. H. Dhebar and R. N. Sachthey
for the appellant.
The respondent did not appear.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shah J. The respondent was a Hindu undivided family con-
sisting of Ashokbhai-the manager-his wife Shobhana and his
minor son Chirag. Ashokbhai was a partner in a firm styled
Messrs Amrit Chemicals with a share of five annas in every
rupee in the profit and loss. It is common ground that the
beneficial interest in the profits of the firm falling to
the share of Ashokbhai belonged to the undivided family.
The year of account of the Hindu undivided family was the
Samvat year-1st of Kartika to 30th Ashwin. The year of
account of Messrs Amrit Chemicals was the calendar year
according to the Gregorian calendar.
By deed dated November 12, 1955, the Hindu undivided family
was disrupted, and the property of the family was divided.
The following are the material clauses of the deed of
partition:-
"4. There is joint family property of the
joint family of Seth Ashokbhai Chimanbhai of
the First Part. Out of that we are making a
partial partition of the property as
hereinafter stated, particulars whereof are as
follows:-
(a) in the Partnership Firm in the name of
the Amrit Chemicals five annas share out of
sixteen annas in the rupee including goodwill
together with the benefit and liability in
respect of the profit and loss relating to
five annas share in a rupee of sixteen annas
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made by the said firm from 1-1-1955 of the
value of about Rs. 70,001.
8. The Partnership Firm of the Amrit
Chemicals has been in existence from 1-1-1946
and a deed of partnership dated 14-8-1946 has
been made in respect of the said partnership
and according to the said deed there
760
is a share of five annas in a rupee of sixteen
annas in the profit and loss of the said Finn
in the name of Seth Ashokbhai Chimanbhai.
Seth Ashokbhai Chimanbhai has become the full
owner of the said share henceforth and all the
rights under the said deed of partnership are
to be enjoyed by Seth Ashokbhai Chimanbhai
party of the First Part himself. Similarly,
any liability under the said deed is to be
borne and discharged by Seth Ashokbhai Chiman-
bhai party of the First Part.
The account of the profit and loss of the said
partnership Firm from 1-1-1955 remains to be
made up and on the making of such accounts
whatever profit or loss the partnership Firm
may have made thereout Seth Ashokbhai
Chimanbhai shall be the full owner and res-
ponsible for a five annas share out of the
rupee of sixteen annas."
In proceedings for assessment for 1955-56-the corresponding
previous year being October 27, 1954 to November 14, 1955the
Hindu undivided family-hereinafter called "the assessee"-
contended that the share in the profits of Messrs. Amrit
Chemicals for the calendar year which accrued on or after
December 31, 1955 belonged to Ashokbhai in his individual
capacity and was not liable to be included in the taxable
income of the assessee, because it had been declared under
the partition deed to belong exclusively to Ashokbhai as
from January 1, 1955, and that in any event since the firm
made up its accounts at the end of the calendar year, the
assessee had no interest in the share of profits for the
calendar year 1955 which accrued at the end of that year to
Ashokbhai in his individual capacity. The Income-tax
Officer ordered that Rs. 21,051 received by Ashokbhai as
five annas share in the profits of the firm be included in
the computation of the total income of the assessee. In
appeal the Appellate Assistant Commissioner held that on
November 12, 1955 Ashokbhai ceased to represent the Hindu
undivided family and the share of profits received from the
firm had to be apportioned between the assessee and
Ashokbhai. This order was confirmed by the Income-tax
Appellate Tribunal.
The Tribunal submitted a statement of case on the following
question to the High Court of Gujarat:
"Whether on the facts and circumstances of
this case the 5 annas share of the income of
Amrit Chemicals
761
or any part thereof for the year 1-1-1955 to
31-12-1955 accrued to the assessee and whether
it could be charged in its hands?"
The High Court agreed with the Revenue authorities that
Ashokbhai had become full owner of the five annas share in
Messrs Amrit Chemicals with effect from November 12, 1955
and not before, but upheld the alternative contention that
no part of the share of profits which accrued to Ashokbhai
on December 31, 1955 was liable to be included in the income
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of the assessee, because on the date of accrual the assessee
had no interest in those profits, and recorded a negative
answer to the question referred.
Ashokbhai represented the assessee in the firm Messrs.
Amrit Chemicals tiff November 12, 1955, and thereafter he
became by virtue of the deed of partition the sole owner of
the five annas share in the firm. The beneficial interest
of the assessee in the profits of Messrs. Amrit Chemicals
therefore ceased only on the execution of the deed of
partition and not before. The Appellate Assistant
Commissioner and the Tribunal held that the share in the
profits of the firm for the year 1955 was liable to be
apportioned between the assessee and Ashokbhai as an
individual the assessee being entitled to a fraction of the
profits equal to the fraction which the period January 1,
1955 to November 12, 1955 bears to the calendar year 1955.
It was also held by the Revenue authorities that the
settlement of accounts of Messrs. Amrit Chemicals did not
give rise to a debt due by a third person to Ashokbhai. The
argument assumes that in the gross receipts. in respect of
any trading transaction carried on by an individual or a
firm lies dormant some element of profit, and to that
element of profit attaches immediately the charge to tax and
it is not deferred till the date on which profits as a
result of the transactions of the accounting year are
ascertained after taking into consideration the business
outgoings at the end of the year on making up accounts.
This argument raises an important question about the time of
accrual of profits to individual partners in a trading firm.
Do the profits in a trading venture carried on by a firm
accrue to the partners of the firm from day to day or from
transaction to transaction, or when the accounts are made,
and a right to receive the profits arises under the
covenants of the deed of partnership?
Under the Income-tax Act, income is taxable when it
accrues, arises or is received, or when it is by fiction
deemed to accrue, arise or is deemed to be received.
Receipt is not the only test
762
of chargeability to tax; if income accrues or arises it may
become liable to tax. For the purpose of this case it is
unnecessary to dilate upon the distinction between income
"accruing" and "arising". But there is no doubt that the
two words are used to contradistinguish the word "receive".
Income is said to be received when it reaches the assessee:
when the right to receive the income becomes vested in the
assessee, it is said to accrue or arise. Fletcher Moulton
L.J., in In re The Spanish Prospecting Co. Ltd. (1) observed
at p. 98:
"The word ’profit’ has . . . . a well-defined
legal meaning and this meaning coincides with
the fundamental conception of profits in
general parlance; although in mercantile
phraseology the word may at times bear
meanings indicated by the special context
which deviate in some respects from this
fundamental signification. Profit implies a
comparison between the state of a business at
two specific dates usually separated by an
interval of a year. The fundamental meaning
is the amount of gain made by the business
during the year. This can only be ascertained
by a companion of the assets at the two
dates."
In the gross receipts of a business day after day or from
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transaction to transaction he embedded or dormant profit or
loss: on such dormant profit or loss undoubtedly taxable
profits, if any, of the business will be computed. But
dormant profits cannot be equated with profits charged to
tax under ss. 3 and 4 of the Income-tax Act. The concept of
accrual of profits of a business involved the determination
by the method of accounting at the end of the accounting
year or any shorter period determined by law. If profits
accrue to the assessee directly from the business the
question whether they accrue de die, in die in or at the
close of the year of account has at best an academic
significance, but when upon ascertainment of profits the
right of a person to a share therein is determined, the
question assumes practical importance, for it is only on the
right to receive profits or income, profits accrue to that
person. If there is no right, no profits will be deemed to
have accrued. This principle was applied by this Court in
E.D. Sassoon & Co. Ltd. V. The Commissioner of Income-tax
Bombay-City (2). The material facts bearing on that
principle were these: E.D. Sassoon & Co. Ltd.--called
’Sassoons’ -were the managing agents of a Company which may
be called
(1) [1911) 1 Ch. 92.
(2) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 313.
763
"the United Mills" and were entitled to receive a
percentage, of annual net profits of the Company as their
remuneration. On December 1, 1943 Sassoons assigned to
Messrs. Agarwal & Co. their office as managing agents and
all their rights and benefits under the managing agency
agreement. Accounts of the managing agency commission
payable to the managing agents for the calendar year 1943
were made up in 1944 and commission for the whole year was
paid to Messrs. Agarwal & Co., thereafter. In the course
of assessment proceedings of Sassoons it was debated whether
in respect of commission earned by the managing agency, tax
was payable on the entirety of the commission by Messrs.
Agarwal & Co. or by Sassoons or it ’was liable to be
apportioned between Messrs. Agarwal & Co. and Sassoons.
This Court held (Jagannadhadas J. dissenting) that Messrs.
Agarwal & Co. alone were liable to pay tax on the whole of
the remuneration received under the contract of service
between the United Mills, because the managing agency was
entire and indivisible, and the remuneration or commission
fell due to the managing agents, only on completion of a
definite period of service and at stated periods it being a
condition of recovery of wages or salary that the service or
duty should be completely performed. Remuneration as
managing agents constituted according to the Court "a debt"
only at the end of each such period of service and no
remuneration or commission was payable to the managing
agents for broken periods. After referring to the
observations of Fletcher Moulton L.J., in the Spanish
Prospecting Co. Ltd.’s case(1) Bhagwati J., observed that
"it would be absurd to suggest that the profits of the
company could accrue from day to day or even from month to
month". The working of the company from day to day could
certainly not indicate any profit or loss, even the working
of the company from month to month could not be taken as a
reliable guide for this purpose. If the profit or loss has
to be ascertained by a comparison of the assets at two
stated points, the most businesslike way would be to do so
at stated intervals of one year and that would be a
reasonable period to be adopted for the purpose. In the
case of large business concerns the working of the company
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during a particular month may show profits and the working
in another month may show loss. The business during the
earlier part of the year may show profit or loss and in the
later part of the year may show loss or profit which would
go to counterbalance the profit or loss as the case may be
in the earlier part
(1) [1911] 1 Ch. 92.
764
of the year. It would therefore be reasonable to determine
the profit or loss as the case may be at the end of every
year so that on such calculation of net profits the managing
agents may be paid their remuneration or commission at the
percentage stipulated in the managing agency agreement and
the shareholders also be paid dividends out of the net
profits of the company.
Counsel for the Commissioner submitted that the
judgment in E.D. Sassoon Co. Ltd.’s case(1) proceeded upon
the special character of a managing agency agreement and did
not purport to lay down a general rule that accrual of
income depends on quantification, or that right to payment
of an ascertainable amount does not arise till accounts are
made. Counsel also submitted that in sale transactions of a
trading venture profits accrue to the trader from
transaction to transaction and are embedded in each
transaction carried on by the trader, and the charge imposed
by S. 4 (1) (a) is not deferred till settlement of accounts.
On that premise, counsel said, that profits dormant or
embedded in the transactions carried on by Messrs. Amrit
Chemicals accrued from transaction to transaction till
November 12, 1955 and properly belonged to the assessee and
were liable to be taxed in the hands of the assessee
notwithstanding any subsequent disposition of those profits
by the assessee. In support of his contention counsel
relied upon Turner Morrison & Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of
Income-tax, West Bengal(1)-a case decided by ’this Court.
In that case an Indian company received commission on sales
effected in India of goods received from a foreign company.
The Indian Company handled the cargo arriving at Calcutta
and made disbursements in connection therewith. collected
and after deducting expenses including their commission
remitted the balance to the foreign principal. It was held
by this Court that the income, profits and gains derived
from sale of goods by the Indian Company in British India
were assessable to tax under S. 4(1) (a) as income, profits
and gains received in the taxable territories by the company
on behalf of the foreign principal. The Court in that case
observed at pp. 529-530 :
"There can, therefore, be no question that
when the gross sale proceeds were received by
the agents in India they necessarily received
whatever income, profits and gains were lying
dormant or hidden or otherwise embedded in
them. Of course, if on the taking of accounts
it be found that there was no profit during
the year
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 313.
(2) [1953]S.C.R. 520.
765
then the question of receipt of income,
profits and gains would not arise but if there
were income, profits and gains, then the
proportionate part thereof attributable to the
sale proceeds received by the agents in India
were income, profits and gains received by
them at the moment the gross sale proceeds
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were received by them in India and that being
the position the provisions of section 4 (1)
(a) were immediately attracted and the income
profits and gains so received became
chargeable to tax under section 3 of the Act."
These observations were, it may be noticed, made in
rejecting the contention raised by Counsel for the tax-payer
that in the gross sale proceeds received by him in India,
there was no income at all. Counsel for the Indian company
said that the gross sale proceeds were merely credit items
in the account and that several amounts were to be debited
in the same account and if there remained any credit
balance, such balance alone could be regarded an stamped
with the formal impress of income capable of being dealt
with as such: income could therefore be said to have been
received only at that stage. The Court did propound that
when gross sale proceeds are received in which is embedded
income, that income will enter the ultimate computation of
the total profits assessable to tax. But that is not to say
that the profits accrue or arise to a trader from day to day
or from transaction to transaction. The observation that to
the income, profits and gains embedded in the gross receipts
s. 4(1) was immediately attracted also does not warrant the
inference that the Court intended to lay down that profits
accrue to a tax-payer before the right thereto has come into
existence. "Profits" as pointed out in E. D. Sassoon Co.
Ltd.’s case(1) do not accrue from day to day or even from
month to month and have to be ascertained by a comparison of
assets at two stated points. The Court also pointed out in
that case that the test for ascertaining whether profits
have accrued or arisen is whether the person who is entitled
thereto has a right to claim the profits.
It is true that E. D. Sassoon Co. Ltd.’s case(1) related
to a managing agency transaction and the Court said that the
managing agency being "a service contract one and
indivisible" until the entire contract is performed, no
right to remuneration arises. But the principle of the case
is that unless a right to profits comes into existence,
there is no accrual of profits. In the case of a partner-
ship, where by a covenant binding between the partners the
(1) 11955] 1 S.C.R. 313.
766
accounts are to be made at stated intervals, the right of a
partner to demand his share of the profits does not arise
until the contingency which by operation of law or under a
covenant of the partnership deed gives rise to that right
has arisen. In the present case by cl. 11 of the
partnership agreement the accounts of the firm had to be
adjusted every year, and accounts for the calendar year 1955
were not and could not be adjusted before December 31, 1955.
By the covenant in the deed of partnership Ashokbhai was
entitled to receive the share of profits at the time when
the accounts were adjusted. Before the agreed date, he had,
under the deed of partnership, no right, unless the other
partners agreed, to claim that the accounts be adjusted. If
the profits arose on the settlement of accounts on December
31, 1955, Ashokbhai alone was the owner of those profits and
the assessee had no right therein. Those profits were
undoubtedly the result of transactions spread over the
entire period of the calendar year 1955, but if the profits
did not arise from day to day or from transaction to
transaction, destination of the profits must be determined
by the title thereto on the day on which they arose. If the
assessee acquired no right in the share of profits received
by Ashokbhai, the taxing authorities could not claim that
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the profits should still be apportioned between the assessee
and Ashokbhai and tax should be levied on the apportioned
income. In our judgment, income becomes taxable on the
footing of accrual only after the right of the tax-payer to
the income accrues or arises, and in the case of an
agreement which makes profits receivable at or on the
happening of a contingency, the fact that the profits are
the result of transactions spread over a period which covers
a period preceding the happening of that contingency would
not make the receipt liable to be paid to persons other than
those who are entitled to receive it on the date on which it
is actually received or became receivable.
Counsel for the Commissioner contend that under the
Indian system of law a partnership is not a body distinct
from the members composing it and that whatever may be the
outlook of laymen concerning partnership, except for certain
specific purposes it is established that a firm is not an
entity or person in law but is merely an association of
individuals, a firm name being only a collective name of
those individuals who have agreed to carry on business in
partnership; and therefore when income accrued to, the firm
in respect of each transaction it must be deemed to accrue
to the individual partners of the firm as well, and accrual
is not postponed till the making up of accounts. Counsel
relied upon
767
the observations made by this Court in Dulichand
Laxminarayan v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Nagpur(1). In
Dulichand’s case(2) it was held that deed evidencing a
partnership of which the partners were an individual, a
joint Hindu family and three firms could not be registered
under s. 26-A of the Income-tax Act. But it cannot be
inferred therefrom that whenever the partnership receives
gross receipts in respect of its business transaction in
which is embedded some profit or loss of the partnership,
that profit or loss results immediately on the gross
receipts reaching the partnership to the individual partners
in their aliquot shares. Normally for profit to accrue or
arise, there should be a right either under the statute or
under contract between the tax-payer and others which
entitles the former to make a demand for those profits.
Bhogilal Laherchand v. Commissioner of Income-tax Bombay
City(2) on which the High Court relied may be referred to.
In Bhogilal’s case (2) under a deed of partnership a father
carried on a business in partnership with his sons. Two of
his minor sons were admitted to the benefits of the
partnership. One of the minor sons named Arvind attained
majority on August 22, 1950, and a fresh partnership deed
was executed on August 28, 1950. Under the partnership de
Id as well as new-accounts were to be taken and the profit
or loss was to be ascertained on the Divali day of each
Samvat year. Arvind died on August 31, 1950, and his share
in the profits as ascertained on August 31, 1950 was sought
to be added under s. 16 (3) of the Income-tax Act, 1922, to
the income of his father on the footing that the amount
constituted income of a minor child of the assessee which
arose from the admission of that minor child to the benefits
of the partnership. The Court held that as Arvind had
agreed to remain a partner after attaining majority and
under the terms of the partnership profit or loss was to be
ascertained only on the Divali day of each year, it was
impossible to predicate whether the partnership had made any
profit or loss, on any date prior to the date of Divali in
any year and as the right to receive a share of the profits
arose on the death of Arvind the share of profit could not
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be treated as income which arose directly or indirectly to
Arvind during his minority so as to make it liable to be
included under s. 16(3) in the assessment of the father.
Chagla C.J., in delivering the judgment of the Court
referred to E. D. Sassoon Co. Ltd.’s case(3) and observed
that though income may accrue or arise to an
(1) [1956] S.C.R. 154.
(2) (1955) 28 I.T.R. 919.
(3) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 313.
768
assessee before he actually receives it, income cannot
accrue or arise to him until he acquires a right to receive
it; and unless and until there is created in favour of the
assessee a debt due by somebody, it cannot be said that he
has acquired a right to receive the income. In so holding,
the learned Chief Justice quoted a passage from the judgment
of Bhagwati J., in E. D. Sassoon Co. Ltd.’s case(1) to the
effect that "income may accrue to an assessee without the
actual receipt of the same. If the assessee acquires a
right to receive the income, the income can be said to have
accrued to him though it may be received later on its being
ascertained. The basic conception is that he must have
acquired a right to receive the income. There must be a
debt owed to him by somebody. There must be as is otherwise
expressed debitum in praesenti, solvendum in futuro......
Unless and until there is created in favour of the assessee
a debt due by somebody it cannot be said that he has
acquired a right to receive the income or that income has
accrued to him".
It was urged by Counsel for the Commissioner that between
the partners collectively and individual partner there can
be no relation of a debtor and creditor and therefore the
principle enunciated by this Court in E. D. Sassoon Co.
Ltd.’s case(1) has no application to cases where a partner
receives his share of the profits of the firm on making up
the account of the partnership. But the principle of E. D.
Sassoon Co. Ltd.’s case 11 is that income accrues or arises
when a right thereto comes into existence and not before.
If that be the correct ratio, and we think it is, the
argument that a partnership is nothing but a compendious
name for partners involving the corollary that a partner
cannot be a creditor of the partnership will have no
practical impact.
In Bhogilal’s case(2) the position was substantially the
same as in the present case. On Arvind attaining the age of
majority and electing to continue as a partner he became
entitled to all the rights and obligations of a partner
since he was admitted to the benefits of the partnership and
also to receive his share of profits computed at the end of
the year as regulated by the partnership deed. On the death
of Arvind the partnership stood dissolved and accounts had
to be made up on August 31, 1950. But the earliest date on
which Arvind’s estate became entitled to a share in the
profits was after he attained the age of majority: it was
therefore not income which arose directly or indirectly in
favour of a minor child so as to attract the application of
S. 16(3) of the
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 313.
(2) (1955) 281.T.R. 919.
769
Income-tax Act. It must be noticed that in Bhogilal’s
case(1), income was earned by the firm in Samvat year 2006,
and Arvind attained the age of majority before the end of
that year. The Revenue authorities sought to apportion the
share of Arvind in the income, and sought to render the
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father liable for that part of the income which it was
claimed was properly attributable to the part of the year
during which Arvind was a minor, but that claim was rejected
and the entire share of Arvind in the profits was held not
taxable under s. 16(3) as part of the income of his father.
In the present case at the date when Ashokbhai acquired
the right to receive a share of profits, there was no
subsisting joint family and his share of the profits was not
received by him on behalf of the assessee.
There was in this case no assignment of the profits which
had already accrued to the assessee. Profits accrued to
Ashokbhai and on the date on which they accrued the assessee
had because of the deed of partition no interest in the
profits. The Revenue authorities could not claim that
profits which under the instrument of partition did not
accrue or arise to Ashokbhai as representing the Hindu
undivided family must for purposes of taxation be so deemed.
The High Court was, therefore, right in answering the
question in the negative.
The appeal fails and is dismissed.
Appeal dismissed.
(1) (1955) 28 I.T.R. 919.
770