Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
JYOTENDRASINHJI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
S.I. TRIPATHI AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT02/04/1993
BENCH:
JEEVAN REDDY, B.P. (J)
BENCH:
JEEVAN REDDY, B.P. (J)
VENKATACHALA N. (J)
CITATION:
1993 AIR 1991 1993 SCR (2) 938
1993 SCC Supl. (3) 389 JT 1993 (2) 664
1993 SCALE (2)408
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950. Articles 136, 226 read with
provisions in Chapter XIX-A. Income Tax Act
1961--Settlement Commission’s order--Interference or
judicial review under Article 226 or
136--Scope--Commission’s interpretation of settlement
deeds--Effect of.
Income Tax Act, 1961: Sections 61, 63, 164(1), 166--U.S.
settlement deed/trust deed--Whether
discretionary--Revocability under section 63--Settlor’s
power under U.S. deed--Extent of--Revenue’s, option to tax
income from a discretionary trust in the hands of trustees
or beneficiaries.
Income Tax Act, 1961: Sections 5, 63, 164(1)--U.K.
settlement deed/trust deed--Income declared and shown in Tax
returns by settlor and after his death by his
son--Taxability of--Payment of taxes in UK or USA on Income
from settlement deeds--If proved, not taxable in India.
Interpretation of Document--U.S.A. or U.K settlement deeds
or trust deeds--Construction--’Transfer", "family members".
"descendants of the family members"--Meaning of--Income
derived from such trusts whether taxable in India.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant’s father executed on 1.1.1964, three deeds of
settlements (trust deeds) in the United States of America.
The terms in them all were identical. The object of these
trusts was to provide for the education, maintenance and up-
keep of the members of the settlor’s family and their
descendants. He also executed two settlements in U.K. with
the very same object.
The settlor (appellant’s father) was riling returns of his
income in India including therein whole of the income
arising from the trusts. For the assessment years 1964-65
to 1969-70, he filed the returns. Since he died on 22-8-
1969, i.e. in the middle of the accounting year (relevant to
the assessment year 1970-71), two returns were filed, one up
to the date of his 938
939
death and the other from the date of his death to the end of
the accounting year, by his eldest son, the appellant,
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including the whole of the income from the trusts.
The appellant filed appeals against the assessment orders
pertaining to the assessment years 1965-66 and 1966-67
contending that the income from U.S. trusts was not taxable
in India either in the hands of settlor or in his hands and
that the inclusion of the said income in the returns by the
settlor and by the appellant was a mistake.
The appellant preferred revisions against other assessment
orders, where appeal was barred, taking the plea of non-
taxability with respect to the income from U.K. trusts and
from the U.S. trusts.
The Appellate Assistant Commissioner allowed the appeals.,
The Revenue’s appeals to the Tribunal were allowed holding
that the A.A.C. acted contrary to Rule 46(2) of the Income
Tax Rules in admitting the additional grounds and in looking
into new material. The Tribunal remitted the appeals back
to A.A.C. At that stage the appellant approached the
settlement commission under Chapter XIX(A) of the Income Tax
Act, 1961.
The Settlement Commission went into all the aspects of the
matter and computed the taxable income of appellant’s father
and his income for the assessment years 1964-65 to 1970-71
and 1970-71 to 1982-83. It directed the I.T.O. to compute
the total income for each of the said assessment years
accordingly and raise demand for the tax due.
The appellant preferred two sets or appeals before this
Court against the two orders of the Settlement Commission.
C.A.s. 4301-07 of 1991 related to the assessment years 1964-
65 to 1970- 71 and C.As.12881300 of 1991 related to the
assessment years 1970-71 to 1982-83.
The appellant contended that the settlement Commission erred
in law in holding that the U.S. trusts were revocable trusts
within the meaning of Section 63 of the Act; that for
attracting Section 63, the deed of transfer must give the
transferor a right to retransfer directly or indirectly
whole or any part of the income or assets to the transferor
or it must give him a right to reassume power directly or
indirectly over the whole or any part of income or assets;
that in the present case such power was not given to the
transferor; that U.S. trusts were discretionary trusts and
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therefore the assessment could be made only upon the
trustees and not upon the beneficiaries-recipients; that the
revenue could not take advantage of the mistake of law on
the part of the settlor or the appellant; that with the
death of the settlor, the U.S. trusts ceased to be revocable
trusts and the appellant could not be taxed on the income
received by him from the said trust, because only the
trustee could be taxed; that the U.K. trusts were also
discretionary trusts and not specific trusts as held by the
Settlement Commission and the assessment could be made only
upon the trustees and not upon the beneficiaries-recipients;
that the Settlement Commission committed a legal error in
including the income from the U.K. trusts in the total
income of the settlor and the appellant even though it was
not paid out by the trustee nor received by the assessees in
India; that in the U.S.A and U.K, tax was levied upon the
respective trust incomes under the laws of those countries;
that levying tax over again in India on the very same income
amounted to double taxation and therefore the tax levied in
India was to be waived.
The Revenue submitted that even if any principles were
decided by the Settlement Commission, they did not bind the
Income Tax authorities in proceedings relating to subsequent
years; that the order of the Commission was relevant to and
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was confined I only to the assessment years to which it
related; that this Court under Article 136 of the
Constitution would not be able to go into the merits of the
order, that the Settlement Commission’s interpretation on
the U.S. and U.K. trusts was perfectly in order and did not
call for any interference by this court; that during his
life-time, the settlor had declared that he had received
income from the U.K. and U.S. trusts and had included the
same in his returns of income for each of the assessment
years relevant herein; that the appellant too acted
similarly and therefore the argument of not receiving the
income from UK trusts was a mere after-thought and should
not he given any credence; that a trustee or the trustees
was/were expected to act reasonably and in furtherance of
the object of the trusts; that they were to apply the income
for the purposes specified, because they could not just
accumulate it; that applying the test of reasonableness, it
was to be held that ordinarily, the trustee ought to
distribute the income each year; and that it was to be held
that the income from the UK trusts had rightly been taken
into account by the Commission while passing its orders.
Dismissing the appeals, this Court,
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HELD: 1.01. The finality clause contained in Section 245-1
does not and cannot bar the jurisdiction of the High Court
under Article 226 or the jurisdiction of this court under
Article 32 or under Article 136, as the case may be. But
that does not mean that the jurisdiction of this court in
the appeal preferred directly in this court is any different
than what it would be if the assessee had first approached
the High Court under Article 226 and then come up in appeal
to this court under Article 136. A party does not and
cannot pin any advantage by approaching this Court directly
under Article 136, instead of approaching the High Court
under Article 226. This is not a limitation inherent in
Article 136; it is a limitation which this court imposes on
itself having regard to the nature of the function performed
by the Commission and keeping In view the principles of
judicial review. [955 D-E]
1.02. The scope of enquiry, whether by High Court under
Article 226 or by this Court under Article 136 is also the
same whether the order of the Commission is contrary to any
of the provisions of the Act and if so, has it prejudiced
the petitioner/appellant-apart from ground of bias, fraud &
malice which, of course, constitute a separate and
independent category. [956-B]
1.03. The appellant power under Article 136 is similar to
power of judicial review, where the appeal is directed
against the orders of the Settlement Commission.
Sri Ram Durga Prasad v. Settlement Commission, 176 I.T.R.
169 and Chief Constable of the N. W. Police v. Evans,[1982]
1 W.L.R. 1155, referred to. [956-D]
1.04. The only ground upon which this Court can interfere in
these appeals is that the order of the Commission is
contrary to the provisions of the Act and that such
contravention has prejudiced the appellant. [956-E]
1.05. The main controversy in these appeals relates to the
interpretation of the settlement deeds though it is true,
some contentions of law are also raised. The commission has
interpreted the trust deeds in a particular manner. Even if
the interpretation placed by the commission on the said
deeds is not correct, it would not be a ground for
interference in these appeals, since a wrong interpretation
of a deed of trust cannot be said to be a violation of the
provisions of the Income Tax Act. [956-F]
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1.06. The interpretation placed upon the said deeds by the
Commission does not bind the authorities under the Act in
proceedings relating to other assessment years. [956-G]
1.07. Though it is not necessary, strictly speaking, to go
into the correctness of the interpretation placed upon
the said deeds by the commission, and it is enough if
this court confines itself to the question whether the order
of the Commission is contrary to the provisions of the Act,
yet, for the sake of completeness, the Court examine whether
the order of Commission is vitiated by any such wrong
interpretation. [956-H, 957-A]
2.01. A discretionary trust is described as a trust where
the trustees have been vested with a discretion in the
matter of distribution of trust income among the specified
class of beneficiaries. In the case of such trusts, the
trustees have a discretion to pay whole or part of the
income to such member or members of the designated class as
they think fit and in such proportion as they deem
appropriate. [957 C-D]
Snell’s Principles of Equity, 25th Edn. (1965) page 129,
referred to.
[957-E]
2.02. The US settlement deed empowers the trustee to hold,
manage, invest and reinvest the principal of the trust fund,
to collect and receive the income thereof and to pay or
apply so much of the net income as the trustee shall in his
absolute and uncontrolled discretion deem advisable to or to
the use of one of more members of the settlor’s family, It
is thus a discretionary trust.
2.03. Para 1(2) of the U.S. Deed empowers the
settlor/transferor and the trustee, acting together to
direct the trustee, at any time, to pay over the entire
income and/or entire corpus or a part thereof to such member
of the settlor’s family or their descendants as they may
direct. The said power cannot be exercised by the settlor
acting Alone. [958-B]
2.04. The power, properly construed, is given to the settlor
to, be exercised together with the trustee and not to the
trustee to be exercised together, with the settlor. The
trustee is anyhow vested with an absolute discretion to
distribute the income of or the principal of the trust to
such member of the family, as he thinks appropriate, under
the clause preceding and paras following para 1(2). If so,
there was no point in saying that
943
he can, together with the settlor, be empowered to pay over
part or whole of income/principal to "such one or more
members of a class composed of the family members living.’
It cannot also be forgotten that the trustee in this case is
a Bank one of the largest in the U.SA. and not an
individual acquaited with the affairs of the settlor’s
family. [958-H, 959-A]
2.05. Section 63 does not say that the power of revocation
vesting in the transferor should be absolute or
unconditional. [959-B]
2.06. Section 63(1) also does not say that the deed of
transfer must confer or vest an unconditional or an
exclusive power in the transferor to give the
power/direction of the nature contemplated by it. Merely
because the concurrence of the trustee had to be obtained by
the transferor/settlor for giving the said direction it
cannot be said that the deed does not contain a provision
giving the transferor a right to reassume power directly or
indirectly over the whole or any part of income or assets
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within the meaning of Section 63(a)(ii) of the Act. [960 B-
C]
2.07. During the lifetime of the settlor, the entire income
arising from the three U.S. trust deeds was bound to be and
was rightly included in the income of the settlor by virtue
of Section 63 read with Section 61. [961.B]
2.08. With the death of the settlor, Section 63 ceased to
apply even though the aforesaid clause empowers not only the
settlor but also the Maharaja for the time being to exercise
the said power. [961-C]
2.09. Section 63 is attracted only where such power is given
to the transferor and the appellant (the son of the
settlor) is not and cannot be called the transferor. It is
not denied that so far as the income from the U.S. trusts is
concerned, it was indeed received by the appellant. [961-D]
2.10. The trustees in the case of a trust declared by a duly
executed instrument in writing are treated as representative
assessees (Section 160(1)(iv)). It is equally true that in
the case of a discretionary trust, trustees are liable to be
taxed in respect of the income received by them at the rate
specified in Section 164(1). [961-F]
2.11. Section 166 states in unmistakable terms that nothing
contained in the preceding provisions in the chapter shall
preclude the Revenue from making a direct assessment upon
the beneficiary-and/or recovering the tax payable from such
person. [962-B]
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2.12. By virtue of Section 166, the Revenue has an option in
the case of a discretionary trust either to make an
assessment upon the trustees or to make an assessment upon
the beneficiaries. Of course, both the trustee and the
beneficiary cannot be simultaneously taxed in respect of the
same income. The assessments made by the Commission on the
deceased-settlor and the appellant are thus unexceptionable.
[966-D]
Behramji Sorabji v. Commissioner of Income Tax, Bombay, 16
I.T.R. 301; Commissioner of Income Tax Bombay City v.
Ratilal Nathalal, 25 I.T.R. 426; Tarunendra Nath Tagore v.
Commr. of Income Tax, 33 I.T.R. 492 (Calcutta); K.
Subramania Pillai v. Agricultural Income Tar Officer,
7hukalay, 53 I.T.R. 764; Commissioner of Income Tar, Punjab
v. Raghubir Singh, 57 I.T.R. 408; Nagappa v. C.I.T, 73
I.T.R. 626 and Ram Swaroop Das v. The State of Bihar, 42
I.T.R. 770, referred to.
Sevantilal Maneklal v. C.I.T., 67 I.T.R. 1, distinguished.
C.I.T v. Kamalini Khatau, 112 I.T.R. 652 (Gujarat) (F.B.)
Agreed with the dissenting opinion.
3.01.Both the settlor and the appellant have been receiving
the income from the UK trusts during the several
assessment years concerned herein. The settlor had
voluntarily included the entire income from the U.K. trusts
in his income in the returns filed by him for the assessment
years 1964-65 to 1969-70. It is unlikely that he would have
so included unless he really received it The Commission
treated those declarations as proof of the settlor’s real
intention. The Commission also relied upon certain other
circumstances including the manner in which the accounts of
these trusts were maintained in support of their opinion
that all concerned with the trusts, acted on the basis that
the trust income was flowing to the settlor, and after his
death to the appellant. The Commission also referred
specifically to similar declarations made by the appellant
in his returns. Even subsequent to the death of the
settlor, the Commission pointed out, the appellant has been
making similar declarations from time to time. [967 C-E]
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3.02. The appellant did not say that he did not receive the
income from the U.K. trusts. All he said was, since it is a
discretionary trust, its income is not taxable in his hands.
If he had not received the income, he would have put forward
that fact in the forefront. But he did not. Section
945
5 of the Act is wide enough to bring all such income to tax.
In case appellant proves that any income has been taxed in
U.S. or U.K., the same income shall not be taxable over
again in India. [%7-H, 968-D]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 1301-07 of
1991
From the Judgment and Order dated 31-3-89 of the Income Tax
Settlement Commission Bombay in Settlement Application No.
10/5/41/78IT.
Ashok Desai, Debi Pal B.K. Mehta, N.K. Sahu, U.K. Sagar and
P.H. Parekh for the Appellant.
Dr. V. Gaurishankar and S. Rajappa for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
B.P. JEEVAN REDDY, J. These appeals are preferred against
the orders of the Settlement Commission dated March 31, 1989
in pursuance of the offers of settlement made by the
appellant. Civil Appeals 1301-07 of 1991 relate to the
assessment years 1964-65 to 1970-71 while Civil Appeals
1288-1300 of 1991 relate to the assessment years 1970-71 to
1982-83. Under its orders, the Settlement Commission
computed the taxable income of the appellant’s father (who
died on August 22, 1969) and of the appellant for the
aforesaid assessment years and gave certain directions,
applying which the I.T.O. was directed to compute the total
income for each of the said assessment years and raise
demand for the tax due. The main issue in all these matters
is the assessability of income from five foreign trusts
created by the appellant’s father, Sri Vikramsinhji.
Sri Vikramsinhji, Ex-ruler of Gondal executed three deeds of
settlements (trusts deeds) in the United States of America
on December 19, 1963 and two deeds in the United Kingdom on
January 1, 1964. The three settlements executed in U.S. are
in identical terms. Similarly, the two settlements,
executed in U.K. are similar. The two sets of settlements,
however, differ from each other in certain particulars,
though both the sets are meant for the benefit of the
settlor and the members of his family. We may refer to the
relevant clauses in the settlements executed in U.S. in the
first instance.
946
Under the U.S. settlements, The National City Bank, New York
is constituted the sole trustee. The trust is created for
the benefit of the grantor/settlor, his wife and children
and their spouses (referred to as family members) and their
descendants. The trustee is empowered to collect the income
from the trust properties and to apply the same among the
family members and/or their descendants in such manner as he
thinks appropriate. He is also authorised to terminate the
trusts for any reason (including tax reasons) and to
transfer, convey and pay off the property held thereunder to
any person or persons then eligible to receive the income of
the trusts. On such termination, the entire assets in the
hands of the trustee are to be paid over to the then
Maharaja (Ruler) or to his living male descendants in equal
shares per stripes. The clause which is relevant herein,
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which according to the Revenue, makes the trusts revocable
ones we may refer to it as para 1(2) for the sake of
convenience reads thus:
"Anything hereinabove to the contrary
notwithstanding, at any time and from time to
time the Trustee shall transfer, convey and
pay over any portion of the income of the
trust fund and any portion or all of the
principal held in trust to or to the use of
such one or more members of a class composed
of the Grantor, the wife or widow of the Gran-
tor, the children of the Grantor living from
time to time, the spouse of any child of the
Grantor then living or deceased (hereinafter
referred to as the "Family Members"), and the
descendants of the Family Members living from
time to time, in such amounts, shares and
proportions, either absolutely or in trust,
and upon such terms and conditions (including
the grant of a further power to appoint) as
the Trustee and a Maharaja who shall have
attained the age of eighteen (18 years) shall
at any time and from time to time appoint and
direct in a written instrument which refers to
and specifically exercises this power and
which is duly executed by the Maharaja and by
the Trustee then acting here-under. The
foregoing power to appoint may be released in
whole, or in part by the Maharaja or by the
Trustee or by both at any time by one or more
written instruments duly executed by the
Maharaja or by the Trustee or by both and
delivered to
947
the Trustee then acting here-under, provided,
however, that if either the Maharaja or the
Trustee, but not both of them, shall release
such power, then the party not so releasing
shall continue to have the power to
appointment hereinbefore provided, acting
alone."
Clauses (2) and (3) of the deeds confer an absolute
discretion upon the trustee to pay over or apply in his
discretion, any part or whole of income or any part of or
whole of the principal to "any person then eligible to
receive the income of this trust" at such time and in such
manner, as he may decide in his absolute discretion. Clause
(3) says further that "the Trustee may omit eligible members
of the class from any and all such payments and
applications, and no such payment or application or
commission of a person from participation therein shall
cause a charge against or otherwise effect the future
interest or share of any person here under." Any
determination made by the trustee in good faith in
exercising the said discretion is held to be binding and
conclusive. It is not necessary to notice other clauses of
these settlements except to say that the object of these
trusts is to provide for the education, maintenance and up-
keep of the members of the settlor’s family and their
descendants.
The settlor died on August 22, 1969. During his lifetime,
the settlor, Vikramsinhji was filing returns of his income
in India including therein whole of the income arising from
the U.S. trusts. The returns were filed by him for the
assessment years 1964-65 to 1969-70 (both years inclusive).
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Since he died in the middle of the accounting year relevant
to the assessment year 1970-71, two returns were filed for
the said assessment year, one upto the date of the death of
the settlor and the other from the date of the death of
settlor to the end of the accounting year. These returns
were filed by his elder son, Jyotendrasinhji, appellant in
these appeals. In these returns too, the appellant included
whole of the income from the U.S. trusts in the respective
returns. At this stage, the appellant says. he was advised
that the income from U.S. trusts was not taxable in India
either in the hands of settlor or in his hands and that
inclusion of the said income in the returns by the settlor
and by the appellant was a mistake. Urging the said
contention, the appellant filed appeals against the
assessment orders pertaining to the A.Ys. 1965-66 and 1966-
67. Inasmuch as the appeals were barred with respect to
other assessment orders, he preferred revisions
948
before the Commissioner of Income Tax. (It may be mentioned
at this stage itself that the income from U.K. trusts was
included in the aforesaid returns just as the income from
U.S. trusts was included. Similarly, the plea of non-
taxability was urged with respect to the income from U.K.
trusts on the same basis as was urged with respect to the
income from the U.S. trusts)
The Appellate Assistant Commissioner, Rajkot admitted
additional grounds and allowed the aforesaid appeals by his
orders dated April 4, 1975 and August 20, 1975. The Revenue
went-up in appeal to Tribunal. The Tribunal allowed the
appeals holding that the A.A.C. acted contrary to Rule 46(2)
of the Income Tax Rules in admitting the additional grounds
and in looking into new material. Accordingly it set aside
his orders and remitted the appeals back to A.A.C. It is at
this stage that the appellant approached the settlement
commission under chapter XIX(A) of the Income Tax Act, 1961.
We may now notice the relevant clauses in the deeds of
settlements executed in U.K. Under these settlement deeds,
one Mr. Robert Hampton Robertson McGill was designated as
the trustee, referred to in the deeds as "the original
trustees". These trusts too were created for the benefit of
the settlor, the members of his family and their
descendants, referred to as ’beneficiaries’. The deeds
define the expression "the trustees" to mean and include the
original trustee or the other trustees for the time being
appointed in terms of the deeds of settlement. The
expression "the beneficiaries" was defined to mean and
include (a) the settlor, (b) the children and remoter issue
for the time being in existence of the settlor, and (c) any
person for the time being in existence who is the wife or
widow of the settlor or the wife or widow or husband or
widower of any of them, the children and remoter issue of
the settlor. The clauses which are relevant for our
purposes read thus: (We have, for the sake of convenient
reference, numbered them as clauses (3) and (4)).
"3. THE Settlor hereby directs that the
Trustee shall and accordingly the Trustees
shall stand possessed of the Trust Fund and
the income thereof upon the trusts following
that it 1 to say :-
949
(1) UPON TRUST to raise and pay out of the
capital thereof any further estate duty which
may still be payable thereon in respect of the
death of the Settlor’s father His Late
Highness Shri Bhojrajji Maharaja Saheb of
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Gondal who died on the Thirty first day of
July One Thousand nine hundred and fifty two
and any interest payable on such duty and any
costs incurred in connection with the
ascertainment or payment of such duty and
interest.
(2) Subject as aforesaid UPON TRUST for all or
such one more and more exclusively of the
others or other of the Beneficiaries at such
age or time or respective ages or times if
more than one in such shares and with such
trusts for their respective benefit and such
provisions for their respective advancement
and maintenance and education at the
discretion of the Trustees or of any other
person or persons as the person who for the
time being is the Maharaja or (of the title is
abolished) would have been the Maharaja had
the title not been abolished shall at any time
during the specified period by any deed or
deeds revocable or irrevocable appoint AND in
default of and subject to any such appointment
upon he trusts and with and subject to the
powers and provisions hereinafter declared and
contained concerning the same PROVIDED ALWAYS
that the foregoing power of appointment shall
not be capable of being exercised:
(a) by anyone other than the Settlor or the
Elder son or the Younger Son; or
(b) in favour of the person making the
appointment save with the consent of the
Trustees (being at least two in number or a
trust Corporation) such consent to be
testified by their being parties to the deed
of appointment and executing the same.......
4. SUBJECT aforesaid the Trustees shall stand
possessed of the Trust Fund and the income
thereof upon the trusts
950
following that is to say :-
(1) The income of the Trust Fund accruing
during the life of the Settlor shall belong
and be paid to the Settlor
(2) Subject as aforesaid the income of the
Trust Fund accruing during the life of the
Elder Son shall belong and be paid to the
Elder Son........
(3) Subject as aforesaid the Trust Fund shall
be held in Trust for the person who (being a
descendant of the Elder Son) first during the
specified period :
(a) becomes the Maharaja or would become the
Maharaja if his title had not been abolished
and
(b) attains the age of eighteen years.........
It is not necessary to notice the other provisions/clauses
of these deeds.
During his lifetime, the settlor, Vikramsinhji, was
including the whole of the income from these trusts in his
returns of income just as he was doing in the case of U.S.
trusts. The said income was also included in the two
returns filed by his son for the A.Y.1970-71. Thereafter,
however, the appellant took the stand, as mentioned
hereinbefore, that the income from these trusts is not
includable in his income. He also took the stand that the
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inclusion of the said income in the returns submitted by his
father for the A.Ys.1964-65 to 1969-70 and by him in the
returns relating to A.Y.1970-71 was under a mistake. This
submission too was the subject matter of the appeals and the
revisions filed before the A.A.C. and the Commissioner of
Income Tax, referred to hereinbefore. When the appellant
approached the settlement commission with an application for
settlement, it related to the income from U.K. trusts as
well.
The Settlement Commission heard the arguments in extenso
spread over several days and disposed of the matter under
two elaborate orders. One order relates to A.Ys. 1964-65 to
1970-71 (Vikramsinhji) and the other to A.Ys.1970-71 to
1982-83 (Appellant). The findings of the Commission which
constitute the bases for its orders may briefly be stated as
the following :
951
(i)Though the U.S. settlements are in the nature of
discretionary trusts, they fall within the mischief of sub-
clause (ii) of Clause (a) of Section 63 of the Act. For
this reason, the whole of the income arising from the trust
properties was liable to be included and was rightly
included in the income of the settlor/transferor, Sri
Vikramsinhji.
(ii) On the death of the settlor, the U.S. settlement deeds
ceased to be revocable but inasmuch as the entire income
thereunder was received by the appellant, Sri
Jyotendrasinhji, it constitutes his- income and could be and
was lawfully. taxed in his hands.
(iii) So far as the U.K. trusts are concerned, clause (3)
did never come into operation inasmuch as no additional
trustees were appointed as contemplated by it. If so,
clause (4) sprang into operation where under the entire
income under the settlements flowed to the settlor during
his lifetime and on his death, to his elder son, the
appellant herein. In other words, these settlements are in
the nature of specific trusts. In any event, the entire
income from these trusts was received by the settlor during
his lifetime and after the settlor’s death, by the
appellant. Therefore, the said income was rightly included
in the total income of the settlor and the assessee during
the respective assessment years.
On the above bases, the Commission computed the taxable
income of the settlor under both the sets of trusts for
A.Ys.1964-65 to 1970-71 (upto the date of the death of the
settlor) as also the income of the appellant for the
A.Ys.1970-71 to 1982-83. The appellant then preferred these
two sets of appeals against the two orders.
At the stage of granting leave, this court ordered (vide the
order dated March 22, 1991) that the appellant shall not be
entitled to question the jurisdiction of the settlement
commission to decide the issues before it and that he will
"confine himself in appeal only to the questions relating to
correctness or otherwise of the Commissioner’s order."
Sri Ashok Desai, learned counsel for the appellant urged the
following contentions’:
(1)The settlement commission erred in law in holding that
the U.S. trusts are revocable trusts within the meaning of
Section 63 of the Act. For attracting Section 63, the deed
of transfer should give the transferor a right
952
to retransfer directly or indirectly whole or any part of
the income or assets to the transferor or it must give him a
right to re-assum power directly or indirectly over the
whole or any part of income or assets. In this case, the
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relevant clause does not give the,transferor such a power.
The power is given to the trustee to be exercised with the
concurrence of the transferor/settlor. Even if, for any
reason, the clause is construed as giving such a power to
the settlor/transferor, Section 63 is not attracted inasmuch
as the power is given: not to him a& such "but jointly to
him and the trustee. Such a power does not attract the
mischief of Section 63.
(2) The U.S. trusts are discretionary trusts. In such a
case, the assessment can be made only upon the trustees and
not upon the beneficiaries-recipients. The Revenue has no
option in such a situation. It must necessarily tax the
trustees and trustees alone. The Revenue cannot take
advantage of the mistake of law on the part of the settlor
or the appellant.
(3) At any rate, with the death of the settlor, the U.S.
trusts ceased to be revocable trusts, assuming that they
were so during his lifetime.. So " far as the appellant is
concerned, he cannot be taxed on the income received by him
from the said trust. Only the trustee can be taxed.
(4) So far as U.K trusts are concerned, the settlement
commission has committee an error of law in holding that
clause (3) could come into operation only if and when the
settlor appointed the additional trustees as contemplated by
it. In fact, the trust, had come into existence with the
sole trustee (McGill) ;and it did not depend upon the
appointment of additional trustees. Clause (3) prevails
over clause (4). If so, the U.K. trusts/settlements are
also discretionary trusts and not specific trusts as held by
the Settlement Commission. In such a case again the
assessment can be made only upon the trustees and not upon,
the beneficiaries recipients..
(5) So far as U.K. trusts are concerned no income was
received,by the settlor or the appellant either in U.K. or
in India. So long as the trustees decided not to exercise
the discretion to distribute the income, no income arose to
any of the beneficiaries. The deeds, do not prescribe, a
time-limit within which the trustees should exercise their
discretion to distribute income. Until the trustees take a
decision to distribute and distribute the income,the
beneficiaries have no right to income nor can it be said
that the income accrues to them. The Settlement
Commission committed a legal error in the income from the
U.K. trusts in the total income of
953
the settlor and the appellant even though it was not paid
out by the trustee ,nor received by the assessees. At any
rate, no income was received in India.
(6)In both the U.S. and U.K., tax has been levied upon the
respective trust incomes under the laws of those countries.
Levying tax over again in this country on the very same
’income amounts to double taxation. On this ground too, the
tax levied in India must be waived.
On the other hand, Dr. Gauri Shankar, the learned counsel
for the Revenue made the following submissions:
(i)The Settlement Commission is not a regular Tribunal.
Its function is different from other quasi-judicial
authorities created by the Income Tax Act. Where an offer
of settlement has been made, the commission either accepts
it or rejects it subject to such conditions and terms as it
thinks fit to impose in that behalf. As the name itself
suggests, it is a settlement a sort of composition. It
need not even give reasons for its order. Even if any
principles are decided by the Commission, they do not bind
the Income Tax authorities in proceedings relating to
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subsequent years. The order of the commission is relevant
to and is confined only to the assessment years to which it
relates. The jurisdiction of this court under Article 136
in an appeal against the orders of settlement commission
must be conditioned by above considerations. This court
would not be able to go into the merits of the order. The
commission’s order cannot be dissected, inasmuch as it is a
package deal. Either it stands or falls as a whole.
(ii) The interpretation placed by the commission on both
U.S. and U.K. trusts is perfectly in order and does not call
for any interference by this court. Indeed, under the
impugned orders, several benefits have been conferred upon
the settlor and the appellant like waiving of penalties,
interest and other liabilities attaching to the assessees
under the Act. While accepting the same, the appellant
cannot be allowed to disown those features of the order
which go against him.
(iii) The argument,of not receiving the income from U.K.
trusts is a mere after-thought and should not be given any
credence. During his lifetime, the settlor had declared
that he had received income from both the U.K. and U.S.
trusts and had included the same in his returns of income
for each of the assessment years relevant heroin. The
appellant too acted similarly.
954
(iv) A trustee or the trustees, as the case may be are
expected to act reasonably and in furtherance of the object
of the trusts. They must apply the income for the purposes
specified. They cannot just accumulate it. Applying the
test of reasonableness it must be held that ordinarily, the
trustee ought to distribute the income each year. As a
matter of fact, it was so distributed If so, it must be held
that the income from these U.K. trusts has rightly been
taken into account by the commission while passing its
orders.
The first question we have to answer is the scope of these
appeals preferred under Article 136 of the Constitution
against the orders of the Settlement Commission. The
question is whether all the questions of fact and law as may
have been decided by the commission are open to review in
this appeal. For answering this question one has to have
regard to the scheme of Chapter XIX-A. The said chapter was
inserted by the Taxation Laws (Amendment) Act, 1975 with
effect from April 1, 1976. A somewhat similar provision was
contained sub-sections (1A) to (1D) of Section 34 of the
Income Tax Act, 1922 introduced in the year 1954. The
provisions of Chapter XIX-A are, however, qualitatively
different and more elaborate than the said provisions in the
1922 Act. The proceedings under this chapter commence by an
application made by the assessee as contemplated by Section
245-C. Section 245-D prescribes the procedure to be
followed by the commission on receipt of an application
under Section 245-C. Sub-section (4) says: ’after
examination of the records and the report of the
commissioner received under sub-section (1), and the report,
if any, of the commissioner received under sub-section (3),
and after giving an opportunity to the applicant and to the
commissioner to be heard, either in person or through a
representative duly authorised.in this behalf, and after
examining such further evidence as may be placed before it
or obtained by it, the settlement commission may,, in
accordance with the provisions of this Act, pass such order
as it thinks fit on the matters covered by the application
and any other matter relating to the case not covered by the
application, but referred to in the report of the
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commissioner under sub-section (1) or sub-section (3)."
Section 245-E empowers the Commission to reopen the
completed proceedings in appropriate cases, while Section
245-F confers all the powers of an Income Tax authority upon
the Commission.Section 245-H empowers the Commission to
grant immunity from penalty and prosecution, with or without
conditions, in cases where it is satisfied that the assessee
has made a full disclosure of his income and
955
its sources. Under- Section 245-HA, the Commission can send
back, the matter to assessing. officer, where it finds that
the applicant is not cooperating with it. Section 245-1
declares that every order of settlement passed under sub-
section (4) of, Section 245(D) shall be conclusive as to the
matters stated therein and no matter covered by such order
shall, save as otherwise provided in, Chapter XIX-A, be re-
opened in any proceeding under the Act or under any other
law for the time being in force. Section 245-L declares
that any proceedings under chapter XIX-A before the
settlement commission shall be deemed to be a judicial
proceeding within the meaning of Sections 193 and 228 and
for the purposes of Section 196 of the Indian Penal Code.
It is true that the finality clause contained in Section
245-I does not and cannot bar the jurisdiction of the High
Court under Article 226 or the jurisdiction of this court
under Article 32 or under Article 136, as the case may be.
But that does not mean that the jurisdiction of this Court
in the appeal preferred directly in this court is any
different than what it would be if the assessee had first
approached the High Court under Article 226 and then come up
in appeal to this court under Article 136. A party does not
and cannot gain any advantage by approaching this Court
directly under Article 136, instead of approaching the High
Court under Article 226. This is not a limitation inherent
in Article 136; it is a limitation which this court imposes
on itself having regard to the nature of the function
performed by the Commission and keeping in view the
principles of judicial review. May be, there is also some
force in what Dr. Gauri Shankar says viz., that the order of
commission is in the nature of a package deal and that it
may not be possible, ordinarily speaking, to dissect its
order and that the assessee should not be permitted to
accept what is favourable to him and reject what is not.
According to learned counsel, the Commission is not even
required or obligated to pass a reasoned order. Be that as
it may, the fact remains that it is open to the Commission
to accept an amount of tax by way of settlement and to
prescribe the manner in which the said amount shall be paid.
It may condone the defaults and lapses on the part of the
assessee and may waive interest, penalties or prosecution,
where it thinks appropriate. Indeed, it would be difficult
to predicate the reasons and considerations which induce the
commission to make a particular order, unless of course the
commission itself chooses to, give reasons for its order.
Even if it gives reasons in a given case, the scope of
enquiry in the appeal remains the same as indicated above
viz., whether it is,contrary
956
to any of the provisions of the Act. In this context, it is
relevant to note that the principle of natural justice (and
alteram partem) has been incorporated in Section 245-D
itself. The sole overall limitation upon tire Commission
thus appears, to be that it should act in accordance with
the provisions of the Act. The scope of enquiry, whether by
High Court under Article 226 or by this Court under Article
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136 is also the same whether the order of the Commission is
contrary to any of the provisions of the Act and if so, has
it prejudiced the petitioner/appellant apart from ground of
bias, fraud & malice which, of course, constitute a separate
and independent category. Reference in this behalf may be
had to the decision of this Court in Sri Ram Durga Prasad v.
Settlement Commission 176 I.T.R. 169, which too was an
appeal against the orders of the Settlement Commission.
Sabyasachi Mukharji J., speaking for the Bench comprising
himself and S.R. Pandian, J. observed that in such a case
this Court is " concerned with the legality of procedure
followed and not with the validity of the order.’ The
learned Judge added ’judicial review is concerned not with
the decision but with the decision-making process." Reliance
was placed upon the decision of the House of Lords in Chief
Constable of the N.W. Police v. Evans, [1982] 1 W.L.R.1155.
Thus, the appellate power under Article 136 was equated to
power of judicial review, where the appeal is directed
against the orders’ of the Settlement Commission. For all
the above reasons, we are of the opinion that the only
ground upon which this Court can interfere in these appeals
is that order of the Commission is contrary to the
provisions of the Act and that such contravention has
prejudiced the appellant The main controversy in these
appeals relates to the interpretation of the settlement
deeds though it is true, some contentions of law are also
raised. The commission has interpreted the trust deeds in a
particular manner, Even if the interpretation placed by the
commission the said deeds is not correct, it would not be a
ground for interference in these appeals, since a wrong
interpretation of a deed of trust cannot be said to be a
violation of the provisions of the Income Tax Act. it is
equally clear that the interpretation placed upon the said
deeds by the Commission does not bind the authorities under
the Act in proceedings relating to other assessment years.
In view of the above, though it is not necessary, strictly
speaking, to go into the correctness of the interpretation
placed upon the said deeds by the commission, and it is
enough if we confine ourselves to the question whether the
order of the Commission is contrary to the provisions of the
957
Act, we propose to, for the sake of completeness, examine
also whether the order of Commission is vitiated by any such
wrong interpretation?
U. S. TRUSTS.
The sole trustee under this settlement deed is the First
National City Bank, New York. The deed empowers the trustee
to hold, manage, invest and reinvest the principal of the
trust fund, to collect and receive the income thereof and to
pay or apply so much of the net income as the trustee shall
in his absolute and uncontrolled discretion deem advisable
to or to the use of one or more members of the settlor’s
family. It is thus a discretionary trust. A discretionary
trust is described as a trust where the trustees have been
vested with a discretion in the matter of distribution of
trust income among the specified class of beneficiaries. In
the case of such trusts, the trustees have a discretion to
pay whole or part of the income to such member or members of
the designated class as they think fit and it such
proportion as they deem appropriate. Section 164(1) sets
out the same idea in the following words:
"Where the individual shares of the persons on
whose behalf or for whose benefit such income
or such part thereof is receivable are
indeterminate or unknown............
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In Snell’s Principles of Equity, 25th Edn. (1965), P.129, a
discretionary trust is defined in the following words:
"A discretionary trust is one which gives the
beneficiary no right to any part of the income
of the trust property, but vests in the
trustees a discretionary power to pay him, or
apply for his benefit, such part of the income
as they think fit....... The beneficiary thus
has no more than a hope that the discretion
will be exercised in his favour."
That these trusts are discretionary trusts is not in
controversy. The main question is whether Para 1(2), quoted
hereinbefore, makes it a revocable trust within the meaning
of Section 63? The said clause begins with a non-obstante
clause, "anything hereinabove to the contrary. not
withstanding’ thereby giving it an overriding effect over
what has been said in the earlier-recitals. It then says
that "at any time and from time to time, the trustee shall
transfer, convey and pay over any portion or of the income
958
of the trust fund and any portion or of all the principal
held in trust’, to such member of the settlor’s family ’as
the trustee and a maharaja who shall have attained the age
of 18 years shall at any time and from time to time appoint
and direct in a written instrument which refers to and
specifically exercise this power and which is duly executed
by the Maharaja and the trustee then acting here-under.’ In
other words, the said clause empowers-the settlor/transferor
and the trustee, acting together to direct the trustee, at
any time, to pay over the entire income and/or entire
corpus. or a pan thereof to such member of the settlor’s
family or their descendants as they may direct. The said
power cannot be exercised by the settlor acting alone. The
question is whether the said clause attracts Section 63?
Section 63 defines the expressions ’transfer’ and ’revocable
transfer’. It says that for the purposes of Sections 60, 61
and 62, ’a transfer shall be deemed to be revocable if (i)
it contains any provisions for the retransfer directly or
indirectly of the whole or any part of the, income or assets
to the transferor or (ii) it in any way gives the transferor
a right to reassume power directly or indirectly over the
whole or any part of the income or assets.’ The expression
"transfer" is defined to include any settlement, trust,
covenant, agreement or arrangement. The expression ’family
members’ occurring in the aforesaid clause in the trust
deeds is defined in the deeds to mean "the children of the
grantor living from time to time, the wife or widow of the
grantor, the spouse of any child of the grantor then living
or deceased.’ The "descendants of the family members’ which
expression also occurs in the aforesaid clause is defined
’in the deeds to mean "the descendants of the family members
living from time to time during the trust term.’
The contention of Sri Ashok Desai the learned counsel for
the appellant is that Section 63 will be attracted ’only
where the transferor is vested with the exclusive and/or
absolute power to give direction of the nature contemplated
therein and not where such a power has to be exercised by
the transferor jointly with another person or with the
concurrence or consent of another person. Indeed, he argues
that the said power is really given to the trustee to be
exercised in concert with the Settlor. We find it difficult
to agree with the learned counsel. Firstly, the power,
properly construed, is given to the settlor to be exercised
together with the trustee and not to the trustee to be
exercised together with the settlor. The trustee is anyhow
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vested with an absolute discretion to distribute the income
of or the principal of the trust to such member of the
family, as he
959
thinks appropriate, under the clause preceding and paras
following para 1(2). If so, there was no point in saving
that he can, together with the settlor, be empowered to pay
over part or whole, of income/principal to "such one or more
members of a class composed of the family members living".It
cannot also be forgotten that the trustee in this case is a
Bank one of the largest in the U.S.A. and not an individual
acquainted with the affairs of the settlor’s family. Now
coming to Section 63, it is equally not possible to agree
with the learned counsel. Section 63 does not say that the
power of revocation vesting in the transferor should be
absolute or unconditional. As pointed out by Chagla, CJ. in
Behramji Sorubji v. Commissioner of Income Tar, Bombay, (16
I.T.R. 301), "the only question that has got to be asked is
whether the transfer is capable of being revoked by the
assessee or not..... it may be that before the power is
exercised, the consent of two beneficiaries might have to be
taken but even so, although the revocation may be contingent
or conditional, still the deed remains a revocable deed of
trust." The same idea was reiterated by Tendulkar, J. in the
said judgment, in the following words:
"It is urged by Sir Jamshedji on behalf of the
assessee that the words "revocable transfer"
in this section require that the transfer
should be revocable absolutely and uncondi-
tional and that by reason of the fact that the
transfer in this case could not be revoked
under clause 10 of the trust deed without the
consent of the wife and the children or any
two-of-them, it is not a revocable transfer
within the meaning of Section 16(1)(c). Apart
from any authority, and reading the section by
itself, I am unable to agree with this
contention. It would involve my reading into
the section words which are not there, and the
Court is not entitled to do so unless it
appears that giving effect to the section as
it stands would lead to an obvious absurdity
or inconvenience which could not have been
contemplated by the legislature. No such
position arises in this case."
We find ourselves in agreement with the said opinions.
Section 63 of the present Act corresponds to the proviso
appended to Section 16(1)(c) of the 1922 Act. The first
proviso read thus: "provided that for the purposes of this
clause the- settlement, disposition or a transfer shall be
deemed to be revocable if it contains any provision for the
retransfer directly or
960
indirectly of the income or assets to the settlor, disponer
or transferor or in any way gives settlor, disponer or
transferor a right to. reassume power directly or indirectly
over the income or assets.’ Section 63(1) also does not say
that the deed of transfer must confer or vest an conditional
or an exclusive-power in the transferor to give the
power/direction of the nature contemplated by it.,
Accordingly, we hold that merely because the concurrence of
the trustee had to be obtained by the transferor/settlor for
giving the said direction, it cannot be said that the deed
does not contain a; provision giving the transferor a; right
to reassume power directly or indirectly over the whole or
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any part of income or assets within the meaning of Section
63(a)(ii)of the Act
In this view of the matter, it is not necessary for us to
refer to other decisions cited, before us in any detail.
The decision of this Court in commissioner,of Income Tax,
Bombay City v. Ratilal Nathalal 25 I.T.R. 426-
emphasises,that the power of revocation must be given to the
settlor as settlor and not in any other capacity. In the
deeds before us, the power is indisputably conferred upon
the Settlor in the very same capacity and not in any
different capacity. The other decision of this court in
Sevantilal Maneklal v. C.I.T. 67 I.T.R. 1 is distinguishable
for the, reason that the power of the settlor therein was
merely to choose among the several objects of the trust and,
therefore, it was held that it does not attract Section 63.
On the other hand, Tarunendra Nath Tagore v. Commr. of
Income Tax 33 I.T.R. 492 Calcutta was a case where the
trust deed empowered the settlor to cause a re-transfer of
the trust assets, in certain specified contingencies. The
question was whether such a provision makes the transfer a
revocable one within the meaning of the first proviso to
Section 16(1)(c) of the 1922 Act. It was held that it does,
notwithstanding the fact that the power had to be exercised
only in certain specified contingencies. The decision of
the Madras High Court in K Subramania Pillai v. Agricultural
Income For Officer, Thukalay 53 I.T.R. 764 was also a case
where the power of revocation was to be exercised in certain
specified contingencies alone. Even so, it was held that it
was a revocable settlement.
Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab v. Raghabir Singh 57
I.T.R. 408 was case where the trust deed provided, for the
application of, the trust income, for satisfying the debts
which the- settlor was under an obligation to discharge.
The question was whether the provision makes the deed a
961
revocable one. It was held that it did not, inasmuch as
there was no provision for re-transfer of the income or the
assets to the settlor, It was observed that the mere fact
that the settlor’s debts had to be discharged from the trust
income did not bring it within the four corners of the first
proviso to Section 16(1)(c).
In the light of the above discussion it must be held that
during the lifetime of the settlor, the, entire income
arising from the three U.S. trust deeds was bound to be and
was rightly included in the income of the settlor by virtue
of Section 63 read with Section 61. The commission was
right in holding so.
With the death of the settlor Section 63 ceased to apply
even though the aforesaid clause empowers not only the
settlor but also the Maharaja for the time being to-
exercise the said ;power. Section 63 is attracted only
where such power is given to the transferor and the
appellant (the son of the settlor) is not and cannot be
called the transferor. It is not denied that so far as the
income from the U.S. trusts is concerned, it was indeed
received by the appellant. The only argument is that
inasmuch these trusts are discretionary trusts, the, income
therefrom must necessarily be taxed and can only be taxed in
the hands of the trustees and not in the hands of the
beneficiary. It is argued that the Revenue has no choice to
tax either the trustees or the beneficiaries in such a case.
We are unable to agree The trustees in the case of a trust
declared by a. duly executed instrument in writing are
treated as representative assessees (Section 160(1)(iv)).
It is equally true that in the case of a discretionary
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trust, trustees are liable to be taxed in respect of the
income received by them at the rate specified in Section
164(1). (Section 164(1) has undergone several changes since
1962 The sub-section as introduced by the Finance Act, 1970
with effect from April 1, 1970 provided that in such case
"tax shall be charged (i) as if the relevant income or part
of relevant income were the total income of the association
of persons, or (ii) @65%, Whichever course would be more
beneficial to the Revenue." For the purpose of this case, it
is not necessary to notice the provisos appended to sub-
section (1) or the subsequent amendments to the sub-
section).
At the same time, Section 166 expressly declares that
"nothing in the foregoing sections in this chapter shall
prevent either the direct assessment
962
of the person, on whose behalf or for whose benefit income
therein referred is receivable or the recovery from such
person of the tax payable in respect of such income."
Language of this section is clear. The, opening words
"nothing in the foregoing sections in this chapter" which
means chapter XV, wherein Sections 159 to 165 among other
sections occur give it an over-riding affect over the
preceding provisions in the chapter. The Section states in
unmistakable terms that nothing contained in the preceding
provisions in the chapter shall preclude the Revenue from
making a direct assessment upon the beneficiary and/or from
recovering the tax payable from such person. The Revenue
has thus been given an option to tax the income from a
discretionary trust either in the hands of the trustees or
in the hands of the beneficiaries. This Court in Nagappa v.
C.I T., 73 I.T.R. 626 and the majority of High Courts have
understood this Section in this manner. In Nagappa, the
appellant had executed seven separate trusts setting
specific properties for the benefit of his minor children.
He appointed himself, his wife and his married daughter as
the trustees. Under each deed, a portion of the income was
to be utilised immediately for the benefit of the
beneficiary and the balance accumulated for his or her
benefit and handed over to the beneficiary on the specified
date. The entire income of the trusts (including the income
accumulated) was included in the income of the appellant
(Nagappa) which was questioned by him. His contention was
that the "I.T.O. was bound to assess the income under each
deed of trust separately in the hands of ’the trustees as
"representative trustees and was incompetent in view of the
express enactment of sub-section (2) of Section 161 to
assess the income in the hands of Nagappa or of the
beneficiaries" The contention was rejected with reference to
Section 161(1) and Section 166 by Shah, J. (speaking foe the
Bench comprising Shah, Ramaswami and Grover, JJ.) in the
following words:
"It is implicit in the terms. of sub-section
(1) that the Income-tax Officer may assess a
representative assessee, but he is not bound
to do so. He may assess either the
representative assessee or the person
represented by him. That is expressly so
enacted in section 166 which states:
"Nothing in the foregoing sections in this
Chapter shall prevent either the direct
assessment of the person on whose behalf or
for whose benefit income therein referred
963
to is receivable, or the recovery from such
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person of the tax payable in respect of ’such
income.’
The Income-tax Officer may, therefore, assess
the person represented in respect of the
income of the trust property and the
appropriate provisions of the income-tax Act
relating to the computation of the total
income and the manner in which the income is
to be computed will apply to that assessment.
The Income-tax Officer may in appropriate
cases assess the representative assessee in
respect of that income and limited, to that
extent, and tax may be levied and recovered
from him to the same extent as may, be
leviable and recoverable from the person rep-
resented by him.
The contention, raised by counsel, for Nagappa
that, since the trustees were assessable in
respect of the income of the beneficiaries
under Section 161(1), that income could not by
virtue of sub-section (2) of Section 161 be
assessed in the hands of the beneficiary is
contrary to the plain terms of Section 166.
Sub-section (2) of Section 161 does not
purport to deny the, Income-tax Officer the
option to assess the income in the hands of
the person represented by the representative
assessee;: it merely enacts that when a
representative assessee is assessed to tax in
exercise of the option of the revenue, he
shall be assessed tinder Chapter XV and shall
not ’in respect of that income be assessed
under any other provision of the Act. We will
presently state the reasons why the rule was
so enacted by Parliament. But on the plain
words used by Parliament the plea raised by
counsel: that the. representative assessee
alone may be assessed as regards income in
respect of which he is. a representative
assessee cannot be accepted.
The learned Judge then went to explain the reasons for which
section 166 among other provisions was enacted.
In another case arising under the Bihar Agricultural Income
Tax Act, 1948, a Bench of this Court comprising J.L. Kapur,
M. Hidayatullah and
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J.C. Shah, JJ. took a similar view in Ram Swaroop Das v. The
State of Bihar 42 I.T.R. 770, even though that Act and did
not contain a provision similar to Section 166. Section 13
of the Bihar Act provided:
"Where any person holds land, from which
agricultural income is derived as a common
manager appointed under any law. from 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
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shall be liable to pay the same."
It was urged that because of Section 13, the Receiver alone
can be assessed in respect of the income of the estate under
his charge and that no assessment can be made upon the
person who actually received such income from the receiver.
The said contention was rejected by Shah, J. speaking for
the Bench in the following words:
"In our view, there is no substance in the
contention raised by the appellant. The
liability to pay tax is charged on the
agricultural income of every person. The
income though collected by the Receiver was
the income of the appellant. By S.13, in
addition to the owner, the Receiver is to be
deemed to be an assessee. But the fact that
the Receiver may, because he held the property
from which income was derived in the year of
account, be deemed to be an’ assessee and
liable to pay tax, does not absolve the appel-
lant, on whose behalf the income was received
from the obligation to pay agricultural
income-tax. Section 13 merely provides a
machinery for recovery of tax, and is not a
charging section. When property is in the
possession of the Receiver, common manager or
administrator,, the taxing authorities may,
but are not bound, to treat such
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persons as assessee and recover tax. The
taxing authorities may always proceed against
the owner of the income and assess the tax
against him. The definition in the connota-
tion of ’person’ undoubtedly include a
Receiver, trustee, common manager,
administrator or executor, and by such
inclusion, it is open to the taxing
authorities to assess tax against any such
persons; but on that account the income in the
hands of the owner is not exempt from
liability to assessment of tax."
The principle of this decision does support our view,
notwithstanding certain variance between the provision
concerned in the said decision and those concerned herein.
Sri Ashok Desai, however, placed strong reliance upon a Full
Bench decision of the Gujarat High Court in CL T. v.
Kamalini Khatau, 112 I.T.R. 652 where the majority (Divan,
CJ. and B.K. Mehta, J. with P.D. Desai, J. dissenting)
appears to take a contrary view. Before we deal with the
decision, it would be interesting to note that the counsel
for the appellant Sri N.A. Palkhivala who appeared for the
appellant before the Settlement Commission had himself
repudiated this argument, though, another counsel, who
appeared for the appellant at a later stage, did not agree
with the view expressed by Sri Palkhivala. The Commission
has recorded the submission of Sri Palkhivala in the
following words:
"We may mention here that when Shri N.A.
Palkhivala appeared before us on behalf of the
applicant he had stated that although
according to the Gujarat High Court’s decision
in the case of Smt. Kamalini Aatau, 112 ITR
652 the income of a discretionary trust is
assessable only in the hands of a
representative assessed and not in the hands
of the beneficiaries, he would not object to
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assessment of the amounts received by: the
beneficiaries in their hands in the present
case, for two reasons. Firstly, according t
o
Shri N.A. Palkhivala, the Gujarat High
Court’s decision in question was erroneous and
it was dissently judgment in that case to the
contrary, which was correct. Secondly, in the
case, before us, the representative assessees,
namely, the trusts, being situated outside
India, could
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not be taxed in India and in such cases it
would not be proper not to assess the
beneficiaries, for that will lead to the
entire income escaping the Indian ’income-tax
in the case of both the representative
assessees and the beneficiaries."
Be that as it may, we have been taken though both the
opinions in the Full Bench decision in extensor We are told
that an appeal is pending against the said decision in this
Court. In the circumstances, we are not inclined to deal
with the said opinions in any detail except to say that we
are inclined to agree with the dissenting. opinion of P.D.
Desai, J. and are not concerned with the reasoning of the
majority.
For the above reasons, we cannot agree with Mr. Ashok Desai.
We hold that by virtue of Section 166, the Revenue has an
option in the case of a discretionary trust either to make
an assessment upon the trustees or to make an assessment
upon the beneficiaries. Of course, both the trustee and the
beneficiary cannot be simultaneously taxed in respect of the
same income. The assessments made by the Commission on the
deceased-settlor and the appellant are thus unexceptionable.
U.K TRUSTS:
The first contention urged with respect to U.K. trusts is
that the commission has wrongly construed clause (3) which
we have extracted hereinbefore. Sri Desai argues that the
trust had already come into existence with the appointment
of the sole trustee, Mr. McGill, and that the coming into
existence of the trust did not depend upon the appointment
of additional trustees. The commission was wrong in holding
that until and unless the additional trustees are appointed,
the trust in clause (3) does not come into existence.
Properly construed, says Sri ’Desai, clause (3) creates a
discretionary trust. Inasmuch as the sub-clause does not
prescribe any time limit within which the trustees must
decide to distribute the income among the beneficiaries,
says the counsel, clause (4) has, not and had never come
into operation. In this case the trustees never did decide
not to exercise their discretion under clause (3). If so,
no income ever arose or accrued to the Settlor or the
appellant under clause (4). If the trustees fail to
exercise their discretion under clause (3), the only remedy
for the beneficiaries is to approach the court to compel the
trustees to exercise their discretion one way or the other,
but they cannot say that the trust
967
income has accrued to them. Clause (4) comes into
operation, says the counsel, only where the trustees decide
not to distribute the income among the specified
beneficiaries; only then does the trust income belongs to
and has to be paid over to the settlor and after the death
of the settlor to his elder son, the appellant.
Accordingly, the counsel says, the Commission was wrong in
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law in treating these trusts as specific trusts.
in our opinion, however, the question urged is academic in
the facts and circumstances of the case. As a matter of
fact, both the settlor and the appellant have been receiving
the income from these trusts during the several assessment
years concerned herein. Sri Vikramsinhji had voluntarily
included the entire income from the U.K. trusts in his
income in the returns filed by him for the assessment years
1964-65 to 1969-70. It is unlikely that he would have so
included unless he really received it. The Commission
treated those declarations as proof of the settlor’s real
intention. The Commission also relied upon certain other
circumstances including the manner in which the accounts of
these trusts were maintained in support of their opinion
that all concerned with the trusts, acted on the basis that
the trust income was flowing to the settlor, and after his
death to the appellant. The Commission also referred
specifically to similar declarations made by the appellant
in his returns. It referred to his statements made in the
two returns filed for the assessment year 1970-71, one
relating to the income received by his father till his death
and the other with respect to the income received by him
during the accounting year after the death of his father.
Even subsequent to the death of Sri Vikramsinhji, the
Commission pointed out, the appellant has been making
similar declarations from time to time. For instance, in
the letter dated March 3, 1975 written by the appellant to
the I.T.O., A-Ward, Rajkot relating to the A.Y. 1972-73, he
had stated, "as per statement of U.K. sent herewith, the
trustees have arrived at income of 13,027 pounds for the
benefit of Sri Jyotendrasinhji. According to our opinion,
this income is not taxable as U.K. trust is discretionary.
However, as it has been taken last, the income may be
included in the hands of Sri Jyotendrasinhji subject to our
appeal". It is significant to notice the ground of non-
taxability put forward in the said letter. The appellant
did not say that he did not receive the income. All he said
was, since it is a discretionary trust, its income is not
taxable in his hands. If he had not received the income, he
would have put forward that fact in the forefront. But he
did not. Similarly, in the return relating to the A.Y.
1973-74, a note was appended by the appellant to the
following effect:
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"Late H.H. Maharaja Vikramsinhji of Gondal has created
trusts in UK. The assessee has been informed that income
falling in the hands of the assessee is 12,627 pounds. This
is, therefore, shows as income in his return.’ (emphasis
added). It is true that the appellant had argued before the
commission that the settlor as well as himself had included
the said income in their returns out of ignorance and on the
basis of wrong legal advice but the said explanation has not
been accepted by the commission and we must go by the
findings of the commission. It is not brought to out notice
that during any of the years concerned herein, did the
appellant ever say that he did not receive the income from
these trusts. If so, the question of law urged is of mere
academic interest and need not be dealt with by us. Section
5 of the Act is wide enough to bring all such income to tax.
So far as the plea of double taxation is concerned, the
observation made by the Commission in that behalf is quite
adequate. It has stated that in case appellant proves that
any income has been taxed in U.S. or U.K., the same income
shall not be taxable over again in India.
For the above reasons, the appeals fail and are dismissed.
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No costs.
V.P.R.
Appeals dismissed.
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