Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, CULCUTTA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
KESHAVLAL LALLUBHAI PATEL
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
09/11/1964
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
WANCHOO, K.N.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 1392 1965 SCR (2) 139
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1972 SC2178 (16)
RF 1983 SC 109 (8,12)
ACT:
Income Tax Act, 1922 (11 of 1922)--self-acquired property
thrown into H.U.F. Hotchpotch-Thereafter partition effected
amongst members H.U.F.-Whether property transferred to wife
and minor son amounted to indirect transfers under’s.
16(3)(a) (iiiq and (iv).
HEADNOTE:
Until the assessment year 1952-53, the assessee was assessed
as an individual. On April 18, 1951, he swore an affidavit
to the effect that he was throwing all his self-acquired
properties into the common hotchpotch of the Hindu undivided
family consisting of himself and his two sons, one a major
and the other a minor. On June 12, 1951, an oral partition
was effected between the several members of this undivided
family, and as a result some of the properties were
transferred to the assessecc’s wife and his minor son.
For the assessment year 1952-53, the assessee claimed that
assessment should be made taking into account the conversion
of his self-acquired
property into joint family property and the subsequent
partition. The Appellate Tribunal confirmed the orders of
the Income-tax Officer and the Assistant Appellate
Commissioner disallowing the claim of the assessee on the
ground that throwing into the hotchpotch one’s self-acquired
property and a subsequent partition among the members of the
Hindu undivided family was an indirect transfer of property
within the meaning of s. 16(3) of the Income-tax Act, 1922.
However, upon a reference made to it, the High Court was of
the view that the above transactions did not amount to a
direct or indirect transfer within the meaning of s. 1 6(3)
(a) (iii) and (iv) of the Act.
HELD:The two conditions that must be satisfied before
s. 16(3) (a) (iii)or (iv) can apply are-
(i) Assets must be transferred by the husband to the wife
or the minor child; and
(ii) They must be transferred directly or indirectly.
Only the word ’transfer’ occurs in s. 16(3)(a)(iii) and (iv)
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and a comparison with the language of s. 16(3)(c) shows that
here it has been used in the strict sense and not in the
sense of ’including every mean-, by which property may be
passed from one to another’. [103 D-G]
Philip John Plasket Thomas v. C.I.T. Calcutta, [1964] 2
S.C.R. 480 referred to.
Although the expression ’directly or indirectly’ is intended
to take in indirect transfers, there must still be a
transfer and the word ’indirectly’ does not destroy the
significance of the word ’transfer’. Even if the act of
throwing self-acquired property into the hotchpotch is
regarded as a transfer, the partition of Joint Hindu family
property is not a transfer in the strict sense and the
provisions of s. 16(3) (a) (iii) and (iv) are there:fore not
attracted. [104 A, G; 105 C-D) C.I.T. v. C. M. Kothari,
[1964] 2 S.C.R. 531. distinguished.
101
Gutta Radhakristnayya v. Gutta Sarasamma, I.L.R. (1951) Mad.
607, M. K. Streman v. C.1.T. Madras, 41 I.T.R. 297 and Jagan
Nath v. State of Punjab, (1962) 64 P.L.R. 22, approved.
Potts’ Executors v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue, 32 T.C.
211, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1022 of
1963.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated April 28, 1961 of
the Gujarat High Court in Income-tax Reference No. 16 of
K. N. Rajagopala Sastri and R. N. Sachthey, for the
appellant.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri, J. P. Pandit, T. A.
Ramachandran, J. B. Dadachanji, O. C. Mathur and Ravinder
Narain, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Sikri, J. This is an appeal on certificate granted by the
Gujarat High Court under S. 66A(2) of the Indian Income Tax
Act, 1922, hereinafter referred to a,,, the Act, and
involves the interpretation of s. 16(3) (a) (iii) and S.
16(3) (a) (iv) of the Act. The facts are not in dispute and
it is not necessary to record the findings of the Income Tax
officer and the Assistant Appellate Commissioner. It is
sufficient to extract the relevant facts from the order of
the Appellate Tribunal.
The respondent. Keshavlal Lallubhai Patel, hereinafter
referred to as the assessee was assessed till the assessment
year 1952-53 (Accounting vear ending March 31, 1952) as an
individual, On April 18, 1951 he swore an affidavit before
the Deputy Nazir, District Court, Ahmedabad, throwing all
his self acquired properties mentioned in the affidavit,
into the common hotchpotch of the Hindu undivided family,
consisting of himself and his two sons. The assessee had a
wife and two sons, one major and the other a minor.
However, no entries in the books were passed. On June 12,
1951, an oral partition was affected between the several
member of the Hindu undivided family, and consistent with
this partition, entries in the books were made. A joint
declaration was made by the assessee, his wife and the major
son on June 26,1951 before the District Court. Later, a
joint statement was made on December 5, 1951. before the
Revenue Court. Properties were transferred thereafter in
accordance with this arrangement to the names of the several
members of the family.
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For the assessment year 1952-53, the assessee claimed that
assessment should be made taking into consideration the
conversion of the self-acquired into joint family property
and the subsequent partition. The Appellate Tribunal
confirmed the orders of the Income Tax Officer and Assistant
Appellate Commissioner disallowing the claim of the assessee
on the ground that "throwing into the hotchpotch one’s self-
acquired property, and a subsequent partition amongst the
members of the Hindu undivided family is an indirect
transfer of the property within the meaning of S. 16(3) of
the Act." The Appellate Tribunal, at the instance of the
assessee, referred the following question to the High Court
"Whether on the facts and circumstances of
this case the throwing into the hotchpotch of
the applicant’s self acquired property and the
subsequent partition among the members of the
Hindu undivided family is an indirect transfer
of property so far as the wife and minor son
are concerned, within the meaning of Section
16(3) (a) (iii) and (iv) of the Income Tax Act
?"
The High Court answered the above question in favour of the
assesses. As stated above, it granted a certificate under
S. 66A(2) of the Act.
Mr. Rajagopala Sastri, the learned counsel for the Revenue,
urges before us that it is a clear case of indirect transfer
by the assessee, within s. 16 (3) (a) (iii) and S. 16 (3)
(a) (iv) of the Act. He does not dispute the genuineness of
the transactions. He says : Look at the position antecedent
to the affidavit dated April 18, 1951. The property in
dispute belonged to the assessee. Then look at the position
after the partition. The properties come to ’be held by the
wife and the minor son. These two facts, according to him,
show that there was a transfer, and it was an indirect
transfer because the joint Hindu family had been utilised
only as a conduit pipe by the assessee to transfer
properties to the wife and the minor son.
Section 16 (3) (a) (iii) and (iv) read as
follows
"16(3)-In computing the total income of any
individual for the purpose of assessment,
there shall be included- (a) so much of the
income of a wife or minor child of such
individual as arises directly or indirectly-
(iii)from assets transferred directly or
indirectly to the wife by the husband
otherwise than for adequate
103
consideration or in connection with an
agreement to live apart; or
(iv)from assets transferred directly or
indirectly to the minor child, not being a
married daughter, by such individual otherwise
than for adequate consideration;."
Mr. Viswanatha Sastri, the learned counsel for the assessee,
contends that in this case there is no transfer in the
strict sense, and as it is a taxing statute, the provisions
should be construed strictly. He says that neither the act
of throwing the self-acquired property into the hotchpotch,
nor the partition of joint family property was a transfer
within the meaning of s. 16(3) (a) (iii) or s. 16 (3) (a)
(iv). If the legislature wanted to rope in these acts, it
could have used another word, such as ’arrangement.
Apart from authority, looking at the language of s. 16(3)
(a) (iii), following two conditions must be satisfied before
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the said provision can be applied :
(1)Assets must be transferred by the husband to the wife;
(2)The assets must be transferred directly or indirectly.
Two questions arise : Is the word ’transfer’ used in the
technical sense or in the popular sense ? And, secondly,
what is comprehended in the word ’indirectly’?
Some assistance is derived in ascertaining the meaning of
the word ’transfer’ by looking at the language of s. 1 6 ( 1
) (c). In that clause, the legislature uses the words
’settlement’, ’disposition’ and ’transfer’, and in the
expression ’settlement or disposition’ is included ’any
disposition, trust, covenant, agreement or arrangement’. In
this clause, the word ’transfer’ is clearly used in the
strict sense. If the legislature were minded to include an
arrangement or agreement, not amounting to transfer, in s.
16(3)(a) (iii), it could have used these words. It seems to
us that the word ’transfer has been used in the strict sense
and not in the sense of ’including every means by which the
property may be passed from one to another’. This
conclusion is reinforced by the consideration that, as
observed by this Court in Philip John Plasket Thomas v.
Commissioner of Income-Tax, Calcutta(1), s. 16(3) "creates
an artificial income and must be construed strictly."
(1)[1964] 2 S.C.R. 480.
104
Coming now to the expression ’directly or indirectly’ there
does not seem to be any doubt that the legislature meant to
rope in indirect transfers. One example is furnished by
Commissioner of Income Tax v.C. M. Kothari(1). But there
must still be a transfer of assets. The word ’indirectly’
does not destroy the significance of the word transfer’.
Mr. Rajagopala Sastri relies strongly on the decision of
this Court in Commissioner of Income Tax v. C. M.
Kothari(1). But in our opinion that case is clearly
distinguishable and does not assist us in this case. In
that case, C. M. Kothari and his sons were both desirous of
putting Rs. 30,000 in the hands of their wives to enable
them to buy a share in a house. Instead of directly gifting
the amount, they hit upon the following device : C. M.
Kothari would gift Rs. 30,000 to the daughter-in-law and the
"on would gift Rs. 30,000 to the mother. This Court held
that it was a palpable device and a trick and the two cross
transactions amounted to an ’indirect transfer’ within s.
16(3) (a) (iii). In effect, this Court held that the father
used his son as a conduit pipe and the son used his father
as a conduit pipe to gift Rs. 30,000 each. Mr. Sastri
relies on the words "chain of transfers" used by
Hidayatullah, J., in the following sentence :
"A chain of transfers, if not comprehended by
the word ’indirectly’ would easily defeat the
object of the law which is to tax the income
of the wife in the hands of the husband, if
the income of the wife arises to her from
assets transferred by the husband."
But in the context they refer to the cross gifts, if we may
so call the two gifts of Rs.30,000 each. These are
transfers in the strict sense of the term. In the present
case there are no cross-gifts. We have, on the otherhand, in
this case, a throwing of property into the hotchpotch and a
partition of the JHF property. As will be pointed out
later, the latter at any rate is not a transfer at all.
This takes us to the facts of this case, and the question
arises whether there is any transfer of assets in the strict
sense. There is some difference of opinion whether the act
of throwing selfacquired property into the hotchpotch is a
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transfer or not. We need not settle this controversy in
this case. Let us assume that It is. But, is a partition
of joint Hindu family property a transfer in the strict
sense ? We, arc of the opinion that it is not. This Was so
held in Gutta Radhadristnayya v. Gutta Saravamma.(2) Subba
Rao, J., then a Judge of the Madras High Court, after
(1) [1964] 2 S.C.R. 531,
(2)1,1,.R. [1951] Maci. -67.
105
examining several authorities, came to the conclusion that
"partition is really a process in and by which a joint
enjoyment is transformed into an enjoyment in severalty.
Each one of the sharers had an antecedent title and
therefore no conveyance is involved in the process as a
conferment of a new title is not necessary." The Madras High
Court again examined the question in M. K. Stremann v.
Commissioner of Income Tax, Madras(1) with reference to s.
16 (3 ) (a) (iv). It observed that "obviously no question
of transfer of assets can arise when all that happens is
separation in status, though the result of such severance in
status is that the property hitherto held by the coparcenary
is held thereafter by the separated members as tenants-in-
common. Subsequent partition between the divided members of
the family does not amount either to a transfer of assets
from that body of the tenants-in-common to each of such
tenants-in-common".
The Punjab High Court came to the same conclusion in Jagan
Nath v. The State of Punjab (2) . Agreeing with these autho-
rities, we hold that when the joint Hindu family property
was partitioned, there was no transfer of assets within s.
16(3) (a) (iii) and (iv) to the wife or the minor son.
Mr. Rajagopala Sastri finally contended that we must look at
the substance of the transaction. But as pointed out by
Lord Normand in Potts’ Executors v. Commissioners of Inland
Revenue(") "the Court is not entitled to say that for the
purposes of taxation the actual transaction is to be
disregarded as "machinery" and that the substance or
equivalent financial results are the relevant consideration.
It may indeed be said that if these loose principles of
construction had been liberally applied, they would in many
instances have been adequate to deal with tax evasion and
there would have been less frequent cause for the
intervention of Parliament."
In the result the appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
(1) (1961) 41 I.T.R. 297.
(2) (1962) 64 P.L.R. 22.
(3) 32 T.C. 21 1.
3Sup./65-8
106