Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX,KERALA-II, ERNAKULAM
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/S. KANDATH MOTORS
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 04/03/1997
BENCH:
B.P. JEEVAN REDDY, SUHAS C. SEN
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
[With Civil Appeals Nos.3338/84, 8601-12/83, 411-16/84,
1570-71/93, 3867/92, 7745/95 and Special Leave Petitions (C)
Nos.19919-20/95 & 12744/91].
J U D G M E N T
SEN, J.
This case relates to assessment year 1972-73 for which
the relevant previous year was the year commencing on
1.7.1970.
Initially, the assessee firm was constituted by a
Partnership Deed dated 13.9.1966 and consisted of six
persons :-
1. K.K. Sudevan
2. K.S. Krishnadas
3. K.A. Jayapalan
4. K.S. Haridas
5. K.A. Mohandas
6. K.A. Haridas
The partnership had been granted registration under the
Income Tax Act. Clause 13 of that Partnership Deed provided
that the death or retirement of any one of the partners
shall not have the effect of dissolving the firm, but the
firm may be continued by the surviving or remaining partners
on such terms and conditions as may be agreed upon in
writing between them.
On 9.2.1970 Sudevan, one of the partners, died. Sudevan
had executed a will on 28th January, 1970 by which his
properties devolved upon his three adult sons, K.S.
Krishnadas, K.S. Haridas and K.S. Bhagavandas.
On 20th February, 1970 a fresh Partnership Deed was
executed. The partners were :-
1. K.S. Krishnadas (No.2 above -
also heir under
the will),
2. K.A. Jayapalan (No.3 above),
3. K.S. Haridas (No.4 above -
also heir under
the will),
4. K.A. Mohandas (No.5 above),
5. K.A. Haridas (No.6 above),
6. K.S. Krishnadas (No.2 above but
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described in
the
partnership as
Krishnadas
representing
the heirs of
late Shri K.K.
Sudevan as per
the registered
Will No.10 of
1970 and being
the Attorney of
the heirs
hereinafter
called the six
partners).
All these six partners had signed the Partnership Deed.
K.S. Krishnadas signed it twice. in his individual capacity
and also in his representative capacity.
The Income Tax Officer initially granted registration
to the newly constituted partnership firm for the assessment
year 1971-72 (accounting year ending on 30th June, 1970).
But for the assessment year 1972-73 (accounting year ending
on 30th June, 1971), the Income Tax Officer in exercise of
his powers under Section 186(1) of the Income Tax Act, 1961
cancelled the registration. The Income Tax Officer was of
the view that Krishnadas had joined the firm in two
capacities - (1) his individual capacity and (2) as
representing the heirs of late K.K. Sudevan. According to
the Income Tax Officer, no genuine partnership firm was in
existence and registration could not be granted to such a
firm. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner upheld the view
of the Income Tax Officer. The Tribunal, however, was of the
view that the partnership was genuine and the Income Tax
Officer was in error in cancelling the registration of the
firm Commissioner of the firm merely because Krishnadas had
signed the Partnership Deed twice in two capacities. At the
instance of the Commissioner of Income Tax, the following
question of law was referred to the High Court :-
"Whether there was during the year
(commencing from 1.7.1970 and
ending with 30.6.1971) relevant to
assessment year 1972-73, a genuine
firm in existence as registered?"
The High Court answered the question in the affirmative
and against the Revenue. The High Court was of the view that
merely because had signed the Partnership Deed twice, once
in his individual capacity and again as representing the
three heirs under the will of Sudevan, would not invalidate
the partnership agreement.
The important point to note is that in the partnership,
there were four other partners apart from Krishnadas.
Krishnadas might not have constituted a partnership with
himself in another capacity. But if a partnership exists
between Krishnadas and several other persons, there is no
legal bar to Krishnadas’s joining the partnership in the
capacity of a nominee of others. On the question whether a
trustee or personal representative or nominee can join as
partner, the law stated in "Lindley and Banks on
Partnership", 16th Edition is "A trustee or personal
representative may clearly enter into partnership, although
he will be personally liable for any debts and liabilities
thereby incurred."
If a partner dies, the surviving partners may carry on
the business by forming another partnership. In such a case,
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they will have to account for the share of the deceased
partner to his legal representatives. But if a partner dies,
his legal representative may be admitted to the new
partnership by the surviving partners. The only question in
such a case will be whether any share of profit received by
him qua partner belongs to him personally or to the estate
which he represents. The answer will inevitably depend on
the facts and circumstances of the case.
However, there can be no legal bar to a personal
representative of the deceased partner being admitted to the
partnership by the surviving partners. If the personal
representative of the deceased is also one of the surviving
as a nominee of the legal heirs of the deceased partner.
The only difficulty that is being pointed out in this
case is that the executor, Krishnadas, who was one of the
surviving partners of the erstwhile partnership, has joined
the new partnership individually and also as representative
of the deceased Sudevan. This would have created a problem,
had there been any conflict of interest of Krishnadas as an
individual and as a representative of the legal heirs of
Sudevan. But that is not the case here. The properties of
Sudevan under his will passed on to his three sons all of
whom were adults. Out of the three sons, Haridas and
Krishnadas joined. Having regard to the composition of the
partnership, it is not possible to hold that Krishnadas
could do anything in the partnership which would be in his
interest and against the interests of the other legal heirs
of Sudevan.
Under the Income Tax Act, provisions for registration
of a firm are contained in Sections 184 and 185. In order to
obtain registration under the said Section 184, the
Assessing Officer has to be satisfied that the partnership
is evidenced by an instrument and the individual shares of
the partners are specified in that instrument. The
application for registration has to be signed by all the
partners (not being minors) personally. On receipt of
application for registration, the Income Tax Officer has to
inquire into the genuineness of the firm and its
constitution as specified in the instrument of partnership.
If he is satisfied that there was in existence a genuine
firm with the constitution so specified, he is required by
Section 185 to pass an order in writing registering the
firm. If he is not satisfied about the genuineness of the
firm or its constitution as specified in the instrument of
partnership, he has to pass an order in writing refusing to
register the firm.
It was held by this Court in the case of Commissioner
of Income Tax v. Abdul Rahim, 55 ITR 651, that a partnership
cannot be held to be not genuine or be denied registration
merely because a partner has joined in a representative
capacity, or is a trustee or benamidar for an outsider or
for another partner, or is otherwise nor beneficially
entitled to the whole or part of his share of profits. In
that case, the firm was held entitled to registration
although there was a private arrangement between two of the
partners (to which the other partners were not parties) that
one will pass his share of profits to the other. It was held
by this Court that a firm would be entitled to registration
although a partner may divide his share of profits with
others, e.g. sub-partners or members of another firm.
In the case of Commissioner of Income Tax v.
Bagyalakshmi & Co., 55 ITR 660, this Court held the firm to
be entitled to registration although two partners who had
been members of a joint family were not entitled to the
entire beneficial interest in thier shares of profits but
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had to divide their shares with other members of their
family which was partitioned. Subba Rao, J. observed :
"A contract of partnership has no
concern with the obligation of the
partners to others in respect of
their shares of profit in the
partnership. It only regulates the
rights and liabilities of the
partners. A partner may be the
karata of a joint Hindu family; he
may be a trustee; he may, under an
agreement, express or implied, be
the representative of a group of
persons; he may be a benamidar for
another. In all such cases he
occupies a dual position. Qua the
partnership, he functions in his
personal capacity; qua the third
parties, in his representative
capacity. The third parties, whom
one of the partners represents,
cannot enforce their rights against
the other partners nor can the
other partners do so against the
said third parties. Their right is
only to a share in the profits of
their partner-representative in
accordance with the terms of
agreement, as the case may be."
We were referred to a large number of cases relating to
the problem of genuineness partnership firm.
In the case of Messrs. Hoosen Kasam Dada, (a firm) v.
Commissioner of Income Tax, Bengal, 5 ITR 182, it was held
that a wakf represented by mutawalli could not enter into
partnership. Under the Mohammedan law, the moment a wakf is
created all rights of property vested in the Almighty.
Therefore, the partnership by the mutawalli as a partner was
no partnership in law and could not be registered under the
Indian Income Tax Act, 1922. It was also observed by
Costello, J., "I entirely fail to see how it could be argued
that a man can be at one and the same time a partner in his
individual capacity and a partner, in a representative
capacity. Taking that point alone, it follows, in my
opinion, tat there was no partnership in law of the
description set forth in the application made by the
assessees".
This observation must be confined to the facts of that
case where it was found that there was a possibility of
conflict of interest between Hoosen Kasam Dada as an
individual and as a representative of the two wakfs. A
partnership has to be brought about by a contract between
two persons. A person cannot contract capacities, he may
have power to contract in his representative capacity with
himself as an individual e.g. as an executor, a trustee and
administrator or an agent. (Halsbury’s Laws of England, 4th
Edition, Vol. 9, Contract, Article 204).
In the case of Rai Bahadur Lokenath Prasad Dhandhania
v. Commissioner of Income Tax, Bihar and Orissa, 8 ITR 369,
a deed of partnership was drawn up between A in his
individual capacity, of the one part, and the joint Hindu
family consisting of A and his two sons of which A was the
Karta, of the other part. An application for registration of
the firm was refused by the Income Tax Officer. It was held
by a Division Bench of the Patna High Court that the
decision of the Income Tax Officer was correct. After
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referring to the following passage from Mayne’s Hindu Law
(9th Edn.) at page 398 :
"Where a managing member of a joint
family enters into a partnership
with a stranger the other members
of the family do not ‘ipso facto’
become partners of the business so
as to cloths them with all the
rights and obligations of a partner
as defined by the Indian Contract
Act. In such a case the family as a
unit does not become a partner, but
only such of its members as in fact
enter into a contractual relation
with the stranger : the partnership
will be governed by the Act."
it was observed in that case :
"it appears to me that the
partnership which was sought to be
entered into on the 24th of
February, 1936, was between
Lokenath on the one hand and
Lokenath on the other as the
managing member of the joint Hindu
family as a unit did not become a
partner; in words that the
partnership could be only treated
to be in fact between the member of
the joint Hindu family and the
Karta as the other contracting
party which in this case is the
same person. The result inevitably
follows that there is no
partnership in law which could have
been registered by the Income tax
Officer."
The case before us is not of a partnership between the
Karta of an H.U.F. with himself in another capacity.
The case of Agarwal and Co. v. Commissioner of Income
Tax, U.P., 77 ITR 10, dealt with a partnership where the tow
Kartas of two Hindu Undivided Families had formed a
partnership. The question was because the capital of the
firm came out of the family funds, whither the members of
the family ipso facto became partners of the firm. It was
held in tat case after referring to the case of Commissioner
of Income Tax v. Kalu Babu Lal Chand, 37 ITR 23 (SC) that it
was well settled that an HUF could not as such enter into a
contract of partnership with another person or persons. An
HUF is a fleeting body. Its composition changed by births,
deaths, marriages and divorce. The assumption that a Hindu
Joint Family could be a partner in a partnership firm was
based on an erroneous view of law. It was held that the
persons who were shown as partners in the deed must be taken
by the Income Tax Officer to have joined the same in their
individual capacity. It was not open to the Income Tax
Officer to go behind the deed and find out whether the
partners mentioned in the deed have joined in their own
right or representing others. It was held :
"Hence, the partnership must be
held to have been validly formed as
the law did not at the relevant
time prohibit anyone, otherwise
competent to contract, from
entering into a contract of
partnership, even though the
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beneficial interest in his share
may vest in others."
In the case of Commissioner of Income Tax, Bombay City
II v. Raghavji Anandji & Co., 100 ITR 246, the firm
consisted of eleven partners. The deed was signed by one of
the partners in two capacities - as an individual and as the
Karta of the HUF. It was held that the partnership was valid
and entitled to registration. It was held in that case that
the partnership agreement was a contract between a person in
one capacity and the same person in different capacity only,
but it was a contract between a person in two capacities and
nine other persons.
We were also referred to a decision of this Court in
case of Chandrakant Manilal Shah and another v. Commissioner
of Income Tax, (1992) 193 ITR 1, where the question of
genuineness of partnership between the Karta of an HUF and
an undivided member of the family, was considered. This
Court following of the decision of the Privy Council in the
case of Lachman Das v. Commissioner of Income Tax, (1948) 16
ITR 35 (PC), held that if a stranger can enter into a
partnership, with reference to his own property, with a
joint Hindu family through its Karta, there is no sound
reason to withhold such opportunity from a coparcener in
respect of his separate and individual property.
In this case before us, there are as many as six
partners. Krishnadas signed the partnership agreement on his
behalf as well as representing the heirs of Sudevan. The
only problem is Krishnadas was himself one of the heirs.
But, having regard to the principles laid down by the
Judicial Committee of the Privy Council and the decisions of
this Court in the cases of Firm Bhagat Ram Mohanlal and
Chandrakant Manilal Shah (supra), where it was held that a
Karta could enter into a partnership with a coparcener of
the same Hindu undivided family, we do not see why the
validity of this partnership agreement should be doubted,
especially, in view of the fact that there were four other
partners and Krishnadas was holding a power of attorney on
behalf of the other legal heirs. There is nothing in the
Partnership Act or the Contract Act which prevents an
agreement of this nature being entered into by the six
partners.
In our view the Kerala High Court has come to a right
decision in this case. The appeal is dismissed. There will
be no order as to costs.
Civil Appeals Nos.3338/84, 8601-
02/83, 411-16/84, 1570-71/93,
4675/84, 3867/92 7745/95 and
Special Leave Petitions (C)
Nos.19919-20/95 & 12744/91.
In view of our decision in Civil Appeal No.3069 of
1980, the above Appeals and Special Leave Petitions are
also dismissed. There will be no order as to costs.