Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE III INCOME TAX OFFICER,CIRCLE-I, SALEM & ANOTHER,
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ARUNAGIRI CHETTIAR
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/05/1996
BENCH:
B.P. JEEVAN REDDY, SUHAS C. SEN
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
S.P.JEEVAN REDDY, J.
The question in these appeals is: whether an erstwhile
partner is liable to pay the tax arrears due from the
partnership firm pretaning to the period when he was
partner. The Madras High Court had held that he is not. The
Revenue is disputing the correctness of that holding
The respondent-assessee was a partner in the firm,
Sannanna Chettiar and Sons. He retired therefrom on April
19, 1963. On his retirement, the firm was continued by
taking in two new partners. The sad firm too was dissolved
with effect from April 12, 1972. The assessments for the
Assessment Years 1962-63 and 1963-64 were competed on March
25, 1967 and March 29, 1968. [For the two accounting years
relevant to the said assessment years, accounts were duly
made up by the partners and the share of profits due to the
respondent paid to him before him retirements.] On February
23, 1972, the Income Tax Officer sent a communication to the
respondent that in respect of the arrears of tax due from
the firm for the aforesaid assessment years, he too is
jointly and severally liable along with the other partners
inasmuch as he was a partner of the firm during the relevant
occurring years. The respondent denied his liability on the
ground that he ceased to be a partner long ago, that there
was a change in the constitution of the firm after his
retirement and that such re-constituted partnership alone is
responsible for paying the said arrears. The Income Tax
Officer did not agree with the respondents contentions.
Recovery proceedings were initiated and the respondent’s
properties attached, whereupon he approached the Madras High
Court by way of two writ petitions. The High Court allowed
the writ petitions mainly lying upon and following the
decision of a Full Bench of the Kerala High Court in Income
Tax Officer, Assessment-ii, Calicut & Anr. v.C.V.George &
Ors. [(1976) 105 I.T.R.144] which dissented from the
decision of the Allahabad High Court in Sahu Rajeshwar Nath
v. Income Tax Officer, Meerut & Anr. [(1964) 54 I.I.R.755].
The reasoning of the High Court, in short, is this: Section
189(3) has no application to the facts of the case inasmuch
as the respondent was not a partner of the firm at the time
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of its dissolution; he ceased to be a partner long prior to
the dissolution. Further, because the Income Tax Act, 1961
did not contain a provision corresponding to the proviso to
sub-section (2) of Section 46 of the Indian Income Tax Act,
1992, the areas of tax due from the firm cannot be recovered
from an erstwhile partner.
Sri B.B.Ahuja, learned counsel for the appellant-
Revenue assailed the correctness of the judgment under
appeal and also that of the Full Bench decision of the
Kerala High Court aforesaid. Learned counsel pointed out
that the decision of the Allahabad High Court in Sahu
Rajeshwar Nath [(1964) 54 I.T.R.755[ (which was dissented
from by the Full Bench of the Kerala High Court) has
actually been affirmed by this Court in Sahu Rajeshwar Nath
v. Income Tax Officer, C-Ward Meerut & Anr. [(1969) 72
I.T.R.617] and that the reasoning and approach of the
Allahabad High Court and of this Court is clearly at
variance with the reasoning of the judgment under appeal.
Since the respondent-assessee was unrepresented, we
requested Mrs. Ramachandran to assist us in this matter, to
which she has agreed graceful. We are grateful for her
valuable assistance. Learned counsel supported the reasoning
and conclusion of the Madras and Kerala High Courts. Learned
counsel submitted that the decision of this Court in Sahu
Rajeshwar Nath does not in any manner affect the correctness
of the reasoning contained in judgment under appeal.
Clause (23) of Section 2 of the Income Tax Act, 1961
[1961 Act] says that "’firm’, ’partner’ and ’partnership’
have the meanings respectively assigned to them in the
Indian Partnership Act, 1932; but the expression ’partner’
shall also include any person who, being a minor, has been
admitted to the benefits of partnership". [Since we are
concerned with the position obtaining prior to April 1, 1989
(i.e., prior to the introduction of Section 188-A by the
Direct Tax Laws (Amendment) Act, 1989) We shall refer to the
relevant provisions as they stood prior to April 1, 1989.]
Chapter XVI contains special provisions applicable to firms.
Section 182 provides for assessment of registered firms
while Section 183 provides for assessment of unregistered
firms. Section 184 provides for application for registration
and Section 185 proscribes the procedure to be followed on
receipt of such application. Section 186 deals with
cancelation of registration. Section 187 to 189 deal with
changes in the constitution of the firm, succession of one
firm by another and with the dissolution of the firm.
Subsection (1) of Section 187 provides that "where at the
time of making an assessment under section 143 or section
144, it is found that a change has occured in the
constitution of a firm, the assessment shall be made on the
firm as constituted at the time making the assessment".
Subsection (2) of Section 187 specifies what does the
expression "change in the constitution of the firm" meaning
in the said section.
Section 156 provides for issuance of a notice of demand
upon the assessee specifying the sum payable. If the tax is
not paid pursuant to the notice of demand, it has to be
recovered in accordance with the Rules contained in the
second Schedule to the Act.
In the Indian Income Tax Act, 1922 [1992 Act], Section
46 provided that the arrears of income tax shall he
recovered as arrears of land revenue by the Collector. The
proviso to Subsection (2) provided that "without prejudice
to any other powers of the Collector in this behalf, he
shall, for the purpose of recovering the said amount, have
the powers which under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 [V
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of 1908], a Civil court has for the purpose of the recovery
of an amount due under a decree......". Sub-Rules (1) and
(2) of Rule 50 of Order 21 of the Code of Civil Procedure
prescribe the mode of execution of a decree obtained against
a firm. Rule 50 reads:
"50. Execution of decree against
firm.-- (1) Where a decree has been
passed against a firm, execution
may be granted--
(a) against any property of the
partnership;
(b) against any person who has
appeared in his own name under Rule
6 or Rule 7 or Order XXX or who has
admitted on the pleadings that he
is, or who has been adjudged to be,
a partner;
(c) against any person who has been
individually served as a partner
with a summons and has failed to
appear;
Provided that nothing in this sub-
rule shall be deemed to limit or
otherwise affect the provisions of
Section 30 of the Indian
Partnership Act, 1932 (9 of 1932).
(2) Where the decree-holder claims
to be entitled to cause the decree
to be executed against any person
other than such a person as is
referred to in sub-rule (1),
clauses (b) and (c), as being a
partner in the firm, he may apply
to the Court which passed the
decree for leave, and where the
liability is not disputed, such
Court may order that the liability
of such person be tried and
determined in any manner in which
any issue in a suit may be tried
and determined.
(3) Where the liability of any
person has been tried and
determined under sub-rule (2), the
order made thereon shall have the
same force and be subject to the
same condition as to appeal or
otherwise as if it were a decree.
(4) Save as against any property of
the partnership, a decree against a
firm shall not release, render
liable or otherwise affect any
partner therein unless he has been
served with a summons to appear and
answer.
(5) Nothing in this rule shall
apply to a decree passed against a
Hindu undivided family by virtue of
the provisions of Rule 10 of Order
XXX."
Sections 25 of the Partnership Act may also be
referred to in this connection. "Every partner is liable,
jointly with all the other partners and also severally, for
all acts of the firm done while he is a partner". says the
section.
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The question in this case, to repeat, is whether the
respondent who was a partner of the aforesaid firm during
the accounting years relevant to Assessment Years 1962-63
and 1963-64 is liable to pay the arrears of tax due from the
said firm notwithstanding his retirement from the said firm
on and with effect from April 19, 1963. Before we answer
this question, we may well ask which is the provision in the
Act which says liable to pay the tax due from the firm
which is continuing. Neither Sri Ahuja, learned counsel for
the Revenue, nor Mrs. Ramchandran, learned counsel for the
assesee, could point out any provision stating expressly
that the partners are liable to pay, whether jointly or
severally, the tax due from the firm. It is true that the
tax due from the firm will be recovered in the first
instance by proceeding against the assets of the firm but
it may happen that either the firm has no assets or the
assets of the firm are not sufficient to satisfy the demand.
In such a case, can the said demand be enforced against the
partners, i.e., against persons who were partners during the
period to which the demand relates and who are continuing as
partners even at the time of the demand and recovery.
Because thereis no express provision in the 1961 Act making
the partners liable for the tax due from the firm, it is not
suggested by Mrs.Ramachandran - nor can it be suggested -
that they are not liable. But then the question immediately
arises, under which provision are they being made liable.
The answer obviously is because of the very nature and
characteristics of a partnership firm as explained in
various decisions of this Court [See Addanki Narayanppa v.
Bhaskara Krishnappa (1966 (3) S.C.R.400) and Malabar
Fisheries Company v. Commissioner of Income Tax, Kerala
[(1979) 120 I.T.R.49] and the provisions of the Partnership
Act. In Malabar Fisheries, this Court discussed the nature
and character of the Partisanship under the Indian Law and
held that "a partnership firm under the Indian Partnership
Act, 1932, is not a distinct legal entity apart from the
partners constituting it and equally in law the firm as such
has * separate rights of its own in the partnership assets
and when one talks of the firm’s property or firm’s assets
all the is meant is property or assets in which all partners
have a joint or common interest". In the particular, the
court held that Indian law in this respect is akin to
English Law - and different from the Scottish law -and
quoted several passage from Lindley on Partnership [12th
Edn.] to indicate the relationship between the firm and the
partners. The following passage from one of the extracts is
relevant. It reads:
The firm is not recognised by
English lawyers as distinct from
the members composing it. IN taking
partnership accounts and in
administering partnership assets,
courts have to some extent adopted
the mercantile view, and actions
may now, speaking generally, be
brought by or against partners in
the name of their firm; but,
speaking generally, the firm as
such has no legal recognition. The
law, ignoring the firm, looks to
the partners composing it; any
change amongst them destroys the
identity of the firm; what is
called the property of the firm is
their property, and what are called
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the debts and liabilities of what
are called the debts and
liabilities of the firm are their
debts and their liabilities. In
point of law, a partner may be the
debtor or the creditor of his co-
partners, by the cannot be either
debtor or creditor o f the firm of
which he is himself a members, nor
can be employed by his firm, for a
man cannot be his own employer."
Sections 25 of the Partnership Act expressly states
that every partner is liable, jointly with all the other
partners, and also severally, for all acts of the firm done
while he is a partner. It is worthy of note that Section 25
does not make a distinction between a continuing partner and
an erstwhile partner. Its principle is clear and specific,
viz., that every partner is liable for all the acts of the
firm done while he is a partner jointly along with other
partners and also severally. If a continuing partner is
liable to pay the tax due from the firm relating to the
period when he was a partner of the firm, we see no reason,
in principle, to hold that the said liability ceases merely
because partner has ceased to be a partner subsequent to
the said period. We do not think that the absence of a
provision corresponding to the proviso to Section 46(2) of
the 1922 Act in the present Act [we many remind that we are
dealing with the provisions obtaining prior to April 1,
1989, i.e., prior to the introduction of Section 188-A]
makes any difference to the position, since the liability of
the partners to pay the dues of the firm does not arise by
virtue of Order XXI Rule 50 of the Code of Civil Procedure,
which is attracted by virtue of the said proviso, but on
account of the basic premise mentioned hereinabove. Order
XXI Rule 50 merely reiterates the said basic premise; it
does not create a new liability.
In this connection, it would be relevant to refer to
the reasoning of the Allahabad Court in Sahu Rajeshwar Nath
[(1964) 5 I.T.R.755]. R.S.Pathak, J., speaking for the
Bench, observed:
"It is true that under the Income-
tax law a firm is treated as an
entity distinct from its partners,
but that is so only for the
purposes of assessment. The
procedure relating to assessment
concludes when an assessment order
has been made and the tax liability
consequent upon that assessment has
been determined. When a notice of
demand is issued requiring the
payment of the tax liability, the
stage of assessment has been left
behind, and with it the distinction
between the firm and its
partners.....The liability of the
partners of the firm is joint and
several, and it is open to a
creditor of the firm to proceed to
recover a debt the firm from any
one or more of the partners. In
Simon’s Income Tax (2nd edition),
volume I page 337, paragraph 510,
the law is thus stated:
The tax assessed in the firm name
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is a partnership debt for which all
who were partners a t the time when
the debt was incurred, or have held
themselves out to the Revenue to be
such, are jointly liable, This
means that any or all of the those
persons may be used for the whole
of the tax due (when the
asssessment become final) without
reference to their respective
shares under the partnership
agreement’: See also Stevens v.
Britten [1954] 3 All. E.R.385]."
In our considered opinion, the aforesaid statement
represents the correct understanding of law. In the appeal
preferred against the said judgment (Sahu Rajeshwar Nath v.
Income Tax Officer), the first contention urged by the
appellant-assessee before this Court was that unless a
separate notice of attachment is issued in the name of the
partner of the firm, the tax arrears due from an un-
registered firm cannot be recoverd from the partner. This
contention was rejected by this Court. We are, however not
concerned with this aspect in this case and, therefore, we
need not go into the question whether there is any
distinction in this behalf between the 1922 Act and the
present Act. No contention was raised in this case that no
demand notice was served upon the respondent. We must
presume that such a notice was served before attaching his
properties. The second contention urged on behalf of the
assessee in the said appeal we that since the certificate or
recovery mentions only the arrears of tax due from the firm,
they cannot be recovered from the partner. This argument was
rejected with reference to the proviso to Section 46(2) of
the Act which conferred upon the Collector the powers of a
civil court in the matter of recovery of the amount due
under a decree. The court also referred to Rule 50 of Order
XXI in this behalf. And the observed: "In the present case,
we see no reason why the Collector should not execute the
certificate for demand of income-tax against the appellant
who admits that he was a partners of the unregistered firm
for the relevant accounting year.....It is manifest that the
provisions of Order XXI, Rule 50(2) apply to the present
case mutatis mutandis and sine the appellant does not
dispute that he was a partner of the unregistered firm for
the relevant accounting year, the Collector could lawfully
proceed to execute the certificate under section 46(2) of
the Act against the appellant and recover the income-tax
arrears from him". The above observations cannot be read as
holding that but for the proviso to Section 46(2), the
arrears of tax due from the partnership cannot be recovered
from the partner, for the reasons set out by us in extension
hereinabove. The liability of a partner to pay the dues of
the partnership does not arise from Order XXI Rule 50 C.P.C.
but from the very nature and character of a partnership
firm.
We are also of the opinion that the discussion in the
judgment of this Court in Sahu Rajeshwar Nath in the para
[beginning on 620 and ending on 621] dealing with the
contention based upon Section 29 of the 1922 Act cannot be
read as disapproving the reasoning of the Allahabad High
Court, quoted by us supra. It is, therefore, not possible
for us to agree with the reasoning of the Full Bench of the
Kerala High Court - which has been adopted in the judgment
under appeal - that where an assessment is made on the
firm, the firm alone is the assesee and that any default in
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paying the tax assessed in that of the firm alone. It is
also not possible for us to agree that merely because a
separate assessment is made on the partner the liability
imposed on the firm cannot be treated as the liability of
the individual partners by importing the general principles
of Partnership Act. In our opinion, this would be making a
distinction between the firm and its partners, which is at
variance with the accepted notion and, at any rate, does not
follow from the decision of this Court in Sahu Rajeshwar
Nath. Similarly, the reliance by the Full Bench upon the
decision of this Court in Income Tax Officer v. Radha
Krishan [66 I.T.R. 590] is equally of not avail. That
decisions says that tax due from one partner on his share
income cannot be recovered from the other partner. To
repeat, the firm is treated as an entity only for certain
purposes. It is not a separate juristic entity distinct from
its partners. A firm cannot be equated to a corporate body.
In this view of the matter, it makes little difference
that Section 189(3) is not attracted in the facts of the
case to make the respondent liable.
We may mention that by virtue of introduction of
Section 188-a with effect from April 1, 1989, the
controversy of the present nature would not arise where the
proceedings for recovery are initiated on or after April 1,
1989. Section 188-A reads:
"Joint and several liability of
partners for tax payable by firm.
188A. Every person who was, during
the previous year, a partner of a
firm, and the legal representative
of any such person who is deceased,
shall be jointly and severally
liable along with the firm for the
amount of tax, penalty or other sum
payable by the firm for the
assessment year to which such
previous ear is relevant and all
the provisions of this Act, so far
as may be, shall apply to the
assessment of such tax or
imposition or levy of such penalty
or other sum."
This section explicitly provides what was implicit
hitherto.
For the above reasons, these appeal are allowed, The
judgment of the High Court is set aside. The writ petitions
filed by the respondent in the High Court shall stand
dismissed. No order as to costs.