Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, MADRAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SIVAKASI MATCH EXPORT COMPANY
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
29/04/1964
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
SHAH, J.C.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1964 AIR 1813 1964 SCR (8) 18
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1965 SC1703 (5)
R 1966 SC1490 (7)
RF 1970 SC1343 (21)
D 1985 SC1572 (4)
ACT:
Income Tax-Partne-hip deed-Application for registration-
Discretion of income-tax Officer in granting Registration-
jurisdiction of the Income Tax officer-jurisdiction of High
Court on reference on
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questions of fact-Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 (11 of 1922),
s. 26-A -Indian Income-tax Rules, 1922, rr. 2, 3, 4.
HEADNOTE:
There were five firms in Sivakasi manufacturing matches
under the name and style of Shenbagam Match Works, Brilliant
Match Works, Manoranjitha Match Works, Pioneer Match Works
and Gnanam Match Works. The sole proprietor of Shenbagam
Match Works and one partner from each of the four firms
entered into a partnership in their individual capacity and
executed a partnership deed dated April 1, 1950. The
Income-tax Officer registered the said partnership ’deed
under S. 26(A) of the Act; but the Commissioner of Income-
tax acting under s. 33B of the Act, cancelled the
registration of the said partnership deed.
On appeal, the Tribunal held that the said partnership deed
was not a genuine one. On a reference the High Court held
on a construction of the partnership deed that the Match
Works were not the real parties to the partnership but the
parties to the document were the real partners. This appeal
has come by way of special leave.
HELD:-(i) (per K. Subba Rao and S. M. Sikri JJ) that the
discretion conferred on the Income-tax Officer under s. 26-A
of the Act is a judicial one and he cannot refuse to
register a firm on mere speculation, but he shall base his
conclusion on relevant evidence. The jurisdiction of the
Income-tax Officer under s. 20-A is, confined to the
ascertaining of two facts namely,
(i) whether the application for registration is in
conformity with the rules made under the Act, and
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(ii) whether the firm shown in the document. (Partnership
deed) presented for registration is a bogus one or has no
legal existence.
(ii) In the present case the partnership deed ex facie
conforms to
the requirements of the law of partnership as well as the
Income-tax Act. There is no prohibition under the
partnership Act against a partner or partners of other firms
combining together to form a separate partnership to carry
on a different business. The fact that such a partner or
partners entered into a sub-partnership with others in
respect of their share does not detract from the validity of
the partnership; nor the manner in which the said partner
deals with the share of his profits is of any relevance to
the question of validity of the partnership.
(iii) The tribunal erred in holding the partnership deed
as not a genuine one. In the present case the assessde-firm
has a separate legal existence, and as such the two
circumstances relied upon by the Tribunal, namely, that one
of the partners of the assessee firm, brought in the capital
from his parent firm or that the profits earned by some of
the partners were surrendered to the parent firm, would be
irrelevant. A partner of a firm can certainly’ secure his
capital from any source or
20
surrender his profits to his sub-partner or any other
person. Those facts cannot conceivably convert a valid
partnership into a bogus one.
In the present case the partnership deed is a genuine
document and it complies with the requirements of law. It
is not an attempt to evade tax, but a legal device to reduce
its tax liability.
(iv) A question of law within the meaning of s. 66(2) of the
Act arose for decision in this case as the Tribunal
misconstrued the provisions of the partnership deed and
relied upon irrelevant considerations in coming to the
conclusion.
Sree Meenakshi Mills Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax,
Madras. [19561 S.C.R. 691, relied on.
Per Shah, J.-(i) It was exclusively within the province of
the Tribunal to decide the question whether the partners
entered into the partnership in their individual capacities
or as representing their match factories and its decision
that in entering into the deed of partnership, the named
partners represented their respective match factories, was
not open to be canvassed in a reference under s. 66(2) of
the Indian Incometax Act. In a reference under s. 66(2) the
High Court was not authorised to disregard the finding of
the Tribunal on a question which was essentially one of
fact. In the present case the High Court was not justified
in interfering with the finding of the Tribunal on a
question of fact because it was not the case of the assessee
that the conclusion of the Tribunal was based on no evidence
or that it was perverse.
(ii) Where the law prescribes conditions for obtaining the
benefit of reduced liability to taxation, those conditions,
unless otherwise provided, must be strictly complied with,
and if they are not so complied with, the taxing authorities
would be bound to refuse to give the tax payer the benefit
claimed. It would be open to the Income-tax Officer to
decline to register a ’deed, even if under the general law
of partnership the rights and obligations of the partners ex
nomine thereto may otherwise be adjusted.
If the requirements relating to the form in which the
petition is to be presented are not complied with, and the
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relevant information is withheld the Income-tax Officer may
be justified in refusing registration. In the present case
the Income-tax Officer was bound to refuse registration as
the application submitted by the five partners of the
assessee did not conform to the requirements of rr. 2 and 3
of Indian Income-tax Rules.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 700 of 1963.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
January 11, 1961 of the Madras High Court in Case Referred
No. 131 of 1956.
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H. N. Sanyal, Solicitor-General, N. D. Karkhanis and
R. N. Sachthei, for the appellant.
K. Srinivasan and R. Gopalakrishnan, for the respondent.
April 29, 1964. The judgment of SUBBA RAO AND SIKRI JJ. was
delivered by SUBBA RAO J. SHAH J. delivered a dissenting
opinion.
SUBBA RAO, J.-This appeal by special leave is directed
against the order of the High Court of Madras in a reference
made to it by the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal under s.
66(2) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, hereinafter called
the Act.
The facts that have given rise to the appeal may briefly be
stated. There are 5 firms in Sivakasi manufacturing matches
under the name and style of Shenbagam Match Works, Brilliant
Match Works, Manoranjitha Match Works, Pioneer Match Works
and Gnanam Match Works. The total number of the partners of
all the 5 firms does not exceed 1 0 or II in number.
Rajamoney Nadar is the sole proprietor of Shenbagain Match
Works and in the other 4 firms there are more than one
partner. In the year 1948 a person from each of those firms
in his representative capacity formed a partnership to carry
on the business of banking and commission agents, the
principal business being the marketing of the products of
the different match factories in Sivakasi. When the said
partnership applied for registration for the assessment year
1949-50, it was refused by the Income-tax Department on the
ground that different firms could not constitute a valid
partnership. Thereafter, Sankaralinga Nadar, Arumughaswami
Nadar, Arunachala Nadar, Palaniswamy Nadar and Rajamoney
Nadar the first four being one of the partners of their
respective firms and the last being the sole proprietor of
his firm, in their individual capacity entered into a part-
nership for the aforesaid purpose and executed a partnership
deed dated April 1, 1950. They presented the said deed of
partnership to the Income-tax Officer for registration. The
Income-tax Officer by his order dated October 27, 1952, re-
gistered the same under s. 26A of the Act: but the
Commissioner of Income-tax under s.33B of the Act, cancell-
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ed the registration by an order dated October 23, 1954, and
directed the assessment to take place as that of an unregis-
tered firm. On appeal, the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal
held, on a construction of the partnership deed and also on
-the basis of some other circumstances, that the said deed
"is not genuine and brought into existence only as a
simulate arrangement, that the profits which are distributed
under the deed to the individuals mentioned therein are not
the true profits of those individuals." In short it held
that the said partnership deed was not a genuine one. On a
reference made to the High Court of Judicature at Madras, a
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Division Bench of that High Court, on a construction of the
document, came to the conclusion that the Match Works were
not the real parties to the partnership but the parties of
the document were the real partners. Hence the present
appeal.
Learned counsel for the Revenue raises before us the fol-
lowing two points, namely, (i) the findings of the Appellate
Tribunal was one of fact and that the High Court had no
jurisdiction to canvass the correctness of its finding on a
reference made under s. 66(2) of the Act, and (ii) the con-
clusion arrived at by the Tribunal was the correct one and
the High Court erroneously interfered with it.
It is common place that under s. 66(2) of the Act a
reference to the High Court lies only on a question of law.
The scope of the provision has been elaborately considered
by this Court in Sree Meenakshi Mills Ltd. v. Commissioner
of income-tax, Madras(’). Therein the scope of the
provision has been laid down under different propositions.
On the basis of the judgment it cannot be gainsaid that if
the order refusing registration goes beyond the scope of the
jurisdiction conferred on the Income-tax Officer under s.
26A of the Act and the Rules made thereunder or if the
decision depends upon the construction of the partnership
deed or if there is no evidence to sustain the finding of
the Tribunal, then the High Court will have jurisdiction to
entertain the reference under s. 66(2) of the Act. In our
view, the finding of the Tribunal falls squarelv under the
said three heads. The relevant provisions of the Act read
thus:
(1) [1956] S.C.R. 691.
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Section 26A. (1) Application may be made to the Income-tax
Officer on behalf of any firm, constituted under an
instrument of partnership specifying the individual shares
of the partners, for registration for the purposes of this
Act and of any other enactment for the time being in force
relating to income-tax or super-tax.
(2) The application shall be made by such person or
persons, and at such times and shall contain such
particulars and shall be in such form, and be verified in
such manner, as may be prescribed; and it shall be dealt
with by. the Income-tax Officer in such manner as may be
prescribed.
In exercise of the powers conferred by s. 59 of the Act, the
Central Board of Revenue made the following rules:
Rule 2. Any firm constituted under an instrument of
partnership specifying the individual shares of the partners
may, under the provisions of Section 26A of the Indian
Income-tax Act, 1922 (hereinafter in, these rules referred
to as the Act), register with the Income-tax Officer, the
particulars contained in the said Instrument on application
made in this behalf.
Such application shall be given by all the partners (not
being minors) personally and shall be made------
(a) before the income of the firm is assessed for
any year under Section 23 of the Act, or
Rule 3. The application referred to in Rule 2 shall be made
in the form annexed to this rule and shall be accompanied by
the original Instrument of Partnership under which the firm
is constituted, together with a copy thereof;
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FORM I
For of Application for Registration of a Firm tinder section
26A of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922
Rule 4. If, on receipt of the application referred to in
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Rule 3, the Income-tax Officer is satisfied that there is or
was a firm in existence constituted is shown in the
instrument of partnership and that the application has been
properly made, lie shall enter in writing at the foot of the
instrument or certified copy, as the case may be, a
certificate in the following form, namely:--.
Rule 6B. In the event of the Income-tax Officer bein-
satisfied that the certificate granted under Rule 4, or
under Rule 6A, has been obtained without there being a
genuine firm in existence, he may cancel the certificate so
granted.
A combined effect of s. 26A of the Act and the rules made
thereunder is that if the application made by a firm gives
the necessary particulars prescribed by the rules, the
Income-tax Officer cannot reject it, if there is a firm in
existence as shown in the instrument of partnership. A firm
may be said to be not in existence if it is a bogus or not a
genuine one, or if in law the constitution of the
partnership is void. The jurisdiction of the Income-tax
Officer is, therefore, confined to the ascertain I ing of
two facts, namely, (i) whether the application for
registration is in conformity with the rules made under the
Act, and (ii) whether the firm shown in the document pre-
sented for registration is a bogus one or has no legal
existence. Further, the discretion conferred on him under
s. 26A is a judicial one and he cannot refuse to register a
firm on mere speculation. but he shall base his conclusion
on relevant evidence.
What are the facts in the present case? The partnership
deed is dated April 1, 1950. In the document five persons
are shown as its partners. The name of the firm is given,
the
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objects of the partnership business are described, the dura-
tion of the business is prescribed and the capital fixed is
divided between them in equal share. Clause 16 of the
Partnership deed, on which the Tribunal relied, reads:
"This firm shall collect a commission of half an anna per
gross on the entire production of the match factories of the
partners, respectively, the Brilliant Match Works,
Manoranjitha Match Works, Pioneer Match Works, Shenbagam
Match Works and Gnanam Match Works produced from 1st April
1950 whether sales were effected through this firm or not
and a further commission of half an anna per gross on the
sales effected through this firm. This commission will be
collected on all kinds of matches produced from the
abovesaid factories. The commission of half an anna per
gross on the entire production of these factories accrued
due at the end of every month shall be debited to the
respective factories under advice to them."
Clauses 22 and 23 which throw further light on the question
raised read:
Clause 22. The business of this firm shall have and has no
connection with the match manufacturing business carried on
now by the partners separately or in partnership with
others.
Clause 23. Any loss to the firm by way of fire accident or
by any other cause during the course of the business of the
firm, notwithstanding the fact that the loss might have
arisen on the sale of or transaction relating to the match
manufacturing concerns of the -partners to this deed, shall
be borne by this firm and shall be equally divided between
the partners to this deed.
It is not disputed that the partnership deed ex facie
conforms to the requirements of the law of partnership as
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well as the Income-tax Act. Under s.4 of the Indian
Partnership Act partnership is the relation between persons
who have agreed
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to share the profits of the business carried on by all or
any of them acting for all persons who have entered into the
partnership with one another called individually partners
and collectively a firm and the name under which the
business is carried on is called the firm name. The
document certainly conforms to the said definition. There
is also no prohibition under the Partnership Act against a
partner or partners of other.firms combining together to
form a separate partnership to carry on a different
business. The fact that such a partner or partners entered
into a sub-partnership. with others in respect of their
share does not detract from the validity of the partnership;
nor the manner in which the said partner deals with the
share of his profits is of any relevance to the question of
the validity of the partnership. The document, therefore,
embodies a valid partnership entered into in conformity with
the law of partnership.
But the Tribunal has held that the partnership is not a
genuine one for the following reasons: (i) previously the
firm entered into a partnership but the registration of the
same was rejected; (ii) under cl. 16 of the partnership deed
the firm has the right to collect the commission of the
entire match production of the larger partnerships whether
they effect their sales through the firm or not; (iii) the
books of Gnanam Match Works show unmistakably that the
capital was contributed not by Palaniswamy Nadar in his
individual capacity but by the larger firm as such; and (iv)
regarding the other three larger firms also the profit
delivered by their representatives from the assessee firm
was divided amongst all the partners according to their
profit sharing ratio in the larger firms. On the other
hand, the High Court found, on a construction of the
relevant clauses of the partnership deed that the business
was the business of the partners of the firm, alone and that
the two circumstances relied upon by the Tribunal were
irrelevant in acertaining whether the said partnership was
real or not. We have already pointed out that the document
ex facie discloses a valid partnership. The partnership was
avowedly entered into by the partners in their individual
capacity as their previous partnership in their
representative capacity was not registered on the ground
that such a part-
27
nership was illegal. If the larger firms cannot constitute
members of a new partnership, some of the partners of those
firms can certainly enter into a partnership shedding their
representative capacity if they can legally do so. If they
can do so, the mere fact that one of them borrowed the
capital from a parent firm-we are using this expression for
convenience of reference--or some of them surrendered their
profits to the parent firm cannot make it anytheless a
genuine firm. Nor does cl. 16 of the partnership deed
detract from its genuineness: that clause does not create
any right in the partnership to collect the commission; in
view of the close Connection between the assessee firm and
the parent firms, the parent firms were expected to effect
all their sales through the assessee firm. If they did not
and if they refused to pay commission, the assessee-firm
could not enforce its right under the said clause. Clause
22 in express terms emphasizes the separate identities of
the assessee-firm and the parent firms, and cl. 23 declares
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that notwithstanding the fact that the loss to the assessee-
firm has arisen on the sale or transaction relating to the
match manufacturing concerns, the assessee-firm alone shall
bear the loss and thereby indicates that the loss of the
assessee-firm will not be borne by the parent firms. If the
assessee-firm has a separate legal existence, the two
circumstances relied upon by the Tribunal, namely, that
Palaniswamy Nadar, one of the partners of the assessee-firm,
brought in the capital from his parent firm or that the
profits earned by some of the partners were surrendered to
the parent firms, would be irrelevant. A partner of a firm
can certainly secure his capital from any source or
surrender his profits to his sub-partner or any other
person. Those facts cannot conceivably convert a valid
partnership into a bogus one.
The Tribunal mixed up the two concepts, viz., the legality
of the partnership and the ultimate destination of the
partners’ profits. It also mixed up the question of the
validity of the partnership and the object of the individual
partners in entering into the partnership. If to avoid a
legal difficulty 5 individuals, though four of them are
members of different firms, enter into a partnership
expressly to comply With a provision of law, we do not see
any question of fraud
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or genuineness involved. It is a genuine document and it
complies with the requirements of law. It is not an attempt
to evade tax, but a legal device to reduce its tax
liability. The fact that all the partners of all the firms
did not exceed 12 in number and if they chose all of them
could have entered into the partnership indicates that there
was no sinister inotive behind the partnership. As the
Tribunal misconstrued the provisions of the partnership deed
and relied upon irrelevant considerations in coming to the
conclusion it did., the High Court rightly differed from the
view of the Tribunal. In the circumstances, in view of the
decision of this Court in Sree Meenakshi Mills’ case(’), a
question of law within the meaning of s.66(2) of the Act
arose for decision. The High Court rightly answered the
question in the negative.
In the result, the appeal is dismissed with costs.
SHAH J.-Sivakasi Match Export Companv-hereinafter referred
to as ’the assessee’-is a partnership "carrying on business
as bankers, commission agents and distributors of the
products of different match factories at Sivakasi in the
State of Madras". The assessee was formed under a deed
dated April 1, 1950. There were five partners of the firm
(1) N. P. A. M. Sankaranlinga Nadar (2) K. S. S. Arumugha-
swami Nadar (3) K. A. S. Arunuchala Nadar (4) K. P. A. T.
Rajamoney Nadar and (5) V. S. V. P. Palaniswamy Nadar.
Before April 1, 1950, there existed a firm also named
Sivakasi Matches Exporting Company which "consisted of a
combine of six match factories" at Sivakasi constituted
under a partnership deed dated March 12, 1948. Registration
of this partnership under s. 26-A of the Income-tax Act,
1922, was refused on the ground that the partnership deed
did not specify the actual shares of the individual
partners. Thereafter a deed forming the partnership which
is sought to be registered in these proceedings was executed
on April 1, 1950. It was recited in the preamble that
originally four out of the five partners had been carrying
on business in partnership as representatives of their
respective match concerns, and it was found necessary that
they should carry on the said business from April 1, 1950,
jointly in their individual capacity, and it was agreed to
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admit into their part-
(1) [I956] S.C.R. 691
29
nership as and from April 1, 1950 the fifth person, namely
V. S. V. Palaniswamy Nadar. The following are the material
paragraphs of the agreement of partnership:
"(16) This firm shall collect a commission of half an anna
per gross on the entire production of the match factories of
the partners, respectively, the Brilliant Match Works,
Manoranjitha Match Works, Pioneer Match Works, Shenbagam
Match Works and Gnanam Match Works, produced from 1st April
1950 whether sales were effected through this firm or not
and a further commission of half an anna per gross on the
sales effected through this firm. This commission will be
collected on all kinds of matches produced from the
abovesaid factories. The commission of half an anna per
gross on the entire production of these factories accrued
due at the end of every month shall be debited to the
respective factories under advice to them.
"(22) The business of this firm shall have and has no
connection with the match manufacturing business carried on
now by the partners separately or in partnership with
others.
(23) Any loss to the firm by way of fire, accident or by any
other cause during the course of the business of the firm,
notwithstanding the fact that the loss might have arisen on
the sale of or transaction relating to the match manufac-
turing concerns of the partners to this deed, shall be borne
by this firm and shall be equally divided between the
partners to this deed."
It is common ground that each partner was concerned in the
manufacture of matches either as owner or as partner with
others. Sankaralinga Nadar carried on business as a
manufacturer of matches with two others in the name of the
Brilliant Match Works; Armughaswamy Nadar as a partner with
three other,, in the name of the Manoranjitha Match Works;
Arunachala Nadar as a partner with two others in the name of
the Pioneer Match Works, Rajamoney Nadar
30
as a sole proprietor of the Shenbagam Match Works, and
Palaniswamy Nadar as a partner with three others in the name
of the Gnanam Match Works.
On October 27, 1952, the Income-tax Officer passed an order
under s. 26-A granting registration of the partnership
constituted under the deed dated April 1, 1950, but the
Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras, exercising revisional
jurisdiction under s. 33-B of the Act, set aside the order
and directed that the partnership be assessed to tax as an
unregistered firm. In the view of the Commissioner the
partnership deed did not represent the true state of affairs
and that "the actual position as distinguished from the
recitals in the partnership deed was that all the partners
of the Match Factories were directly partners of the
assesses" and as the names of all the partners were not set
out in the deed and the other requirements relating to
registration had not been complied with, registration be
refused. The order was confirmed in appeal to the Income-
tax Appellate Tribunal.
At the direction of the High Court of Madras Linder s. 66(2)
of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, the Tribunal referred
the following question:
"Whether on the facts and the circumstances of the case the
refusal of registration of the assessee firm under s. 26-A
of the Income-tax Act was correct in law?"
The High Court answered this question in the negative.
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Against that order, with special leave, the Commissioner of
Income-tax has appealed to this Court.
The Tribunal held that the covenants in the deed of
partnership and especially in paragraphs 3 and 16 viewed in
the light of the entry in the books of account of Gnanam
Match Works debiting the capital contributed in the name of
Palaniswamy Nadar to the assessee, and not in the name
of its partner, and division of the profits received from
the assessee by Palaniswamy Nadar, Sankarlinga Nadar, Aru-
maghaswamy Nadar and Arunachalam Nadar with others owners of
their respective business, indicated that the named partners
were acting as representatives of those owners. The
31
High Court also held that cl. 16 of the partnership agree-
ment did not impose any liability upon the manufacturing
concerns to pay any commission as stipulated therein on the
" production of the match factories". The High Court ob-
served:
"Clause 16 does not lay any liability upon the manufacturing
concerns and cannot operate as an enforceable contract
against those other match companies. If one of those match
companies should decline to put through its sales business
through the assessee-firm, the only result would perhaps be
that the partnership would not advance moneys or finance to
that manufacturing concern; it might also be that the
particular partner interested in the manufacturing concern
might stand to lose the benefit of this partnership. But
that is not the same thing as to say that those
manufacturing concerns themselves had become partners of the
assessee partnership."
The High Court also observed that the assessee was not
concerned with the disposal of the profits received by its
partners. Finally the High Court observed that "an indi-
vidual member of the partnership is not prevented from
engaging in business as member of another partnership. The
law does not prohibit such a course and even the Income-tax
law relating to registration of partnerships only refuses
registration when the formation of such partnerships is
intended to evade the incidence of income-tax and nothing
more. We are not satisfied that the Tribunal correctly
appreciated the facts of the present case in coming to the
conclusion that the match works were the real parties to
this instrument of partnership".
The Solicitor-General appearing for the Commissioner
contended that the High Court had in exercising its advisory
urisdiction, in substance assumed appellate powers and had
ought to reappraise the evidence on which the conclusion of
the Tribunal was founded. Counsel contended that the
Tribunal had recorded a clear finding on the facts that the
32
"match works were the real" partners, and the High Court was
bound on the question framed to record its opinion on the
questions of law referred on the basis of that finding.
Section 26-A of the Indian Income-tax Act enacts the
procedure for registration of firms. By that section on be-
half of any firm application may be submitted to the Income-
tax Officer for registration, if the firm is constituted
under an instrument of partnership, specifying the
individual shares of the partners. The application has to
be made by such person or persons and at such times and
shall contain such particulars and shall be in such form as
may be prescribed. It is open to a firm to carry on
business without registration under the Indian Registration
Act. By obtaining an order of registration, the partners of
the firm are enabled to -et the benefit of lower rates of
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tax than those applicable to the whole income of the firm,
when charged as a unit of assessment. In the relevant year
of assessment if the firm was unregistered the tax payable
by it had to be determined as in the case of any other
distinct entity and tax had to be levied on the firm itself.
If, however, the firm was registered, the firm did not pay
the tax and therefore the tax payable by the firm was not
determined, but the share of profit received from the firm
was added to the income of each partner, and on the total so
determined tax was levied against the partners individually.
It is manifest that if the firm desired to secure this
privilege it had to conform strictly to the requirements
prescribed by law. Under the rules framed under s. 59 of
the Indian Income-tax Act.
1922, rules 2 to 6B deal with registration and renewal of
registration of firms. The application for registration has
to
be signed by all the partners (not being minors)
personally,
and the application has to be in the fornm prescribed by
rule 3. The form prescribed requires the partners of the
firm to disclose the names of each partner, his address,
date of admittance to Partnership, and other relevant
particulars including each Dartrer’s share in the profits
and loss, "particulars of the firm as constituted at the
date" of the application, and particulars of the
apportionment of the income, profits of gains or loss of the
business, profession or vocation in the previous year
between the partners who in that previous
33
year were entitled to share in such income, profits or gains
or loss, where the application is made after the end of the
relevant previous year. If the Income-tax Officer is
satisfied that there is a firm in existence constituted as
shown in the instrument of partnership and the application
has been properly made, he has to enter in writing at the
foot of the instrument or certified copy, as the case may
be, a certificate of registration of the partnership under
s. 26-A of the Act. This certificate of registration
ensures only for the year mentioned therein, but the firm is
entitled to obtain renewal of the registration.
On the conclusion recorded by the Tribunal that the
partnership deed dated April 1, 1950 was in truth an ins-
trument relating to an agreement to carry on business ’by
all the persons who owned the five businesses of which the
representatives signed the deed, the application submitted
by the live named partners of the assessee did not conform
to the requirements of rules 2 and 3 and the Income-tax
Officer was bound to refuse registration. It is true that
the ,ground given by the Tribunal that the share of profits
received by individual partners of the assessee was
distributed by four of those partners who had entered into
partnership contracts with other persons in the business of
their respective match factories, standing independently of
other grounds, may not be of much value in deciding whether
all the partners of the match factories were intended to be
partners of the assessee. It is open to a partner who
receives his share in the profits of the firm to dispose of
that share in any manner he pleases, and no inference from
the distribution of the share of such profits alone can lead
to the ,inference that the persons who ultimately received
the benefit of the profits are partners of the firm which
had distributed the profits. But the Tribunal adverted to
three circumstances. The terms of the deed of partnership
purported to impose an obligation to pay Commission on the
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production of the five match factories, representatives of
which sought to join as partners eo nomine. Imposition of
such ,an obligation was in the view of the Tribunal
inconsistent -with the representatives of those factories
being partners of the assessee in their individual
capacities. Again it was 51 S. C.-3
34
found that Gnanam Match Works had contributed capital to the
assessee directly and not through its representative. These
wo circumstances, coupled with the ultimate distribution of
profits by the individual partners among the partners of the
match factories, led to the inference that each partner who
signed the deed dated April 1, 1950 was acting not in his
personal capacity, but as representing his match factory.
Granting that the evidence from which the inference was
drawn was not very cogent, it was still exclusively within
the province of the Tribunal to decide that question on the
evidence before it, and its decision that in entering into
the deed of partnership, the named partners represented
their respective match factories, was not open to be canvas-
sed in a reference under s. 66(2) of the Indian Income-tax
Act. The High Court observed that cl. 16 of the partnership
deed did no, impose any obligation upon the partners or
their representatives of the five firms to pay commission as
stipulated under that clause. Undoubtedly, there is no
covenant expressly imposing such liability upon the mach
factories, but it was open to the Tribunal from he incor-
poration of such an unusual covenant to infer that the named
partners of the assessee were acting as representatives of
their respective factories. To assume from the erms of cl.
16 that the owners of these match factories were not bound
by the covenants contained in cl. 16 is to assume the answer
to the question posed for opinion. There was also the
circumstance that in the books of account of the Gnanam
Match Works of which Palaniswamy Nadar was a representative,
capital was debited as contributed to the assessee. This
indicated that the Gnanam Match Works was directly
interested in the partnership. If that factory had made an
advance to Palaniswamy Nadar to enable the latter to
contribute his share of the capital, the entry in the
factory’s books of account would have been in the name of
its partner and not in the name of the assessee. That also
is a circumstance justifying an inference that in entering
into the deed dated April 1, 1950 Palaniswamy acted for and
on behalf of all the partners of the Gnanam Match Works.
Sharing of profits received by the named partners, with
their partners in the respective match factories may not, as
I have
35
already observed, by itself be a decisive circumstance. But
that did not authorise the High Court to disregard the find-
ing of the Tribunal on a question which was essentially one
of fact. When the High Court observed that they were
satisfied that the Tribunal had not correctly appreciated
the evidence in arriving at the conclusion that each Match
factory was the real party in the instrument of partnership,
they assumed to themselves jurisdiction which they did not
possess.
It was not the case of the assessee that there was no
evidence on which the conclusion arrived at by the Tribunal
could be founded, nor was it the case of the assessee that
the conclusion was so perverse that no reasonable body of
men properly instructed in the law could have arrived at
that conclusion. It is also clear from the record that no
such question was even canvassed before the Tribunal.
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Manifestly such a question could not arise out of the order
,of the Tribunal, and none such was referred to the High
Court. By the question actually referred, the Tirbunal
sought the opinion of the High Court whether on the facts
and circumstances refusal of the application for
registration of the assessee was correct in law. If it was
the case of the assessee that the conclusion of the Tribunal
was based on no evidence, or that it was perverse, the High
Court could be asked to call for a reference from the
Tribunal on that question. But that was never done.
It is true that the object of enacting s. 26-A and the rules
relating to the procedure for registration is to prevent
escapement of liability to tax. But it is not necessary
that before an order refusing registration is made, it must
be established that there was evasion of tax attempted or
actual. It is always open to a person, consistently with
the law, to so arrange his affairs that be may reduce his
tax liability to the minimum permissible tinder the law.
The fact that the liability to tax may be reduced by the
adoption of an expedient which the law permits, is wholly
irrelevant in considering the validity of that expedient.
But where the law prescribes conditions for obtaining the
benefit of reduced liability to taxation, those conditions,
unless otherwise provided, must be strictly complied with,
and if they are not
36
so complied with, the taxing authorities would be bound to
refuse to give the taxpayer the benefit claimed. When
application for registration of the firm is made, the
Incometax Officer is entitled to ascertain whether the names
of the partners in the instrument are of persons who have
agreed to be partners, whether the shares are properly
specified and whether the statement about the shares is real
or is merely a cloak for distributing the profits in a
different manner. If all persons who have in truth agreed
to be partners have not signed the deed or their shares are
not truly set out in the deed of partnership, it would be
open to the Incometax Officer to decline to register the
deed, even if under the general law of partnership the
rights and obligations of the partners eo nomine thereto may
otherwise be adjusted. As a corollary to this, if the
requirements relating to the form in which the petition is
to be presented are not complied with, and the relevant
information is withheld, the Incometax Officer may be
justified in refusing registration.
In my view the High Court was in error in holding on the
question submitted that the registration of the assessee
under s. 26-A of the Income-tax Act was wrongly refused.
The answer to the question referred to the High Court should
be in the affirmative.
ORDER
In accordance with the opinion of the majority, the appeal
is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed