Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE COMMISSIONER OF GIFT TAX, TRIVANDRUM .
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
T.M. LOUIZ
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 20/09/2000
BENCH:
S.P.Bharucha, S.N.Phukan, Y.K.Sabharwal
JUDGMENT:
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JUDGMENT
Bharuch,aJ,J_.
The High Court of Kerala answered in the atlirmative
and against the Revenue the following question:
"Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of the
case, the Tribunal was right in holding that no element of
gift was involved when the assessee retired from the firms
in which he had been a partner?"
The Revenue is in appeal by special leave.
The assessment year with which we are concerned is the
Assessment Year 1973-74. The assessee retired with effect
from 1st April. 1972 from two firms in which he was a
partner. The Gift Tax Officer assessed him to gift tax on
the basis that, upon such retirement, there was a gift
because the assessee had surrendered his rights in the
firms. The
assessee appealed and the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner upheld the assessee’s contention that thera was
no voluntary act by him and that he had only relinquisred
his right and interest in the firms so that here was up
gift. Before the Tribunal it was urged on behalf of the
Revenue that the amounts taken by the assessee from the
firms for rns shares therein was less than the market value
thereof since the goodwill of ^he firm had not been taken
into account. There had, therefore, been a relinquishment
of his shares, which was a gift. The Tribunal took the view
that on retirement, the retiring partner was only entitled
to get the value of his share in the partnership assets less
Maoi ilties, it was, therefore, merely an adjustment of
rights between the retiring partner and the continuing
partners in the assets of the partnership and there was no
element of transfer of interest by the retiring partner to
the continuing partners. From out of the order of the
Tribunal, the question, quoted above, was boosed to the High
court. The High Court took much the same view as that taken
by the Tribunal.
The learned Attorney General, appearing for the
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revenue, drew our attention to the definitions of "gift" and
’transfer of property" -in the Gift Tax Act. ’"Gift" is
defined is under:
"’gift.’ means the transfer by one person to another
of any existing movable or immovable property made
voluntarily and without consi derail on in money or money’s
worth, and includes the transfer or conversion of any
property referred to in section 4, deemed to be a gift under
that section.
Explanation:-- A transfer of any building or part
thereof referred to in clause (iii), clause (ilia) or clause
(iiib) of section 27 of the Income-tax Act by the person who
is deemed under the said clause to be the owner thereof made
voluntarily and without consideration in money or money’s
worth, shall be deemed to be a gift made by such person."
"Transfer of property" is defined as under:
"’transfer of property’ means any disposition,
conveyance, assignment, settlement, delivery, payment or
other alienation of property and, without limiting the
generality of the foregoing, includes--
(a) the creation of a trust in property;
(b) the grant or creation of any lease, mortgage,
charge, easement, licence, power, partnership or interest in
property;
(c) the exercise of a power of appointment (whether
general, special or subject to any restrictions as to the
persons in whose favour the appointment may be made) of
property vested in any person, not the owner of the
property, to determine its disposition in favour of any
person other than the donee of the power; and
(d) any transaction entered into by any person with
intent thereby to diminish directly or indirectly the value
of his own property and to increase the value of the
property of any other person."
In the submission of the learned Attorney General,
when 1
assessee did not voluntarily take what he was entitled
to upon retirement from the two firms; he gave up what he
did not take to the other partners and there was a gift by
him to them thereof. He laid emphasis on the fact that the
definition of "transfer of propsrty’ included a sett
iernent^ and, in his submission, there was a settlement of
accounts here.
Our attention was drawn by the learned Attorney
General to the Judgment of the Calcutta nigh Court in
Commissioner of Gift Tax vs. Nani Gopal Mondal (ISO I.T.R.
469). This was, as is very clear from the following
passage, a case of an express gift and, therefore, is of no
relevance to the facts of the case before us:
"In the instant case, Mani Gopal Mondal by the deed of
gift transferred his share or interest in the firm which
included his share of goodwill also. Hence, for the purpose
of payment of gift-tax, the value of one-third share of the
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assessee in the goodwill shall also be taken into account.’’
The learned Attorney General then referred to the
judgment of this Court in Commissioner of Gift Tax. Gujarat
vs. Chhotalal Mohan Lall (166 i.T.R. 124). This was a
case in which there were three partners in a firnn: C had a
share of seven annas, G had a share of four annas and P had
a share of five annas. P retired and the firm was
re-constituted. G
continued as before. The share of C was reduced to
four annas. R was inducted as a partner with a four annas
share. The two minor sons of C were admied to the benrfit
of the partnership with a snare of twelve and thirteen
percent respectively. The Question was ’whether there was a
gift by C to his two minor sons of his share of three annas
partnership. This Court held that with the admission of the
two minors to the benefit of the partnership, the right to
the money value of the goodwill stood transferred and there
had been a gift within the meaning of the Gift Tax Act.
The definition of "gift" makes it clear that there has
to be a transfer by one person to another of movable or
immovable property: such transfer has to be voluntary and
without consideration -in money or money’s worth. What -is,
therefore, absolutely essential for the purposes of a gift
"is a transfer of property. "Transfer of property" is
defined for the purposes of the Gift iax Act as any
disposition or conveyance, or assignment or settlement or
delivery or payment or other alienation of property. The
question, therefore, is whether, on the facts of the case at
hand, there has been any such transfer of property.
To recapitulate, when the assessee retired from the
two firms, he received the value of his shares therein and
the argument was that what he had received was less than the
market value of his shares since the goodwill of the firms
had not been taken into account.
When a partner reires from a partnership, the
partnership continues. The assets and the goodwill of the
firm continue to remain the assets and the goodwill or the
firm. All the retiring partner gets is the value of his
share in the partnership assets les its liabilities. It
cannot, in such circumstances, be held, assuming that the
retiring parner received less then what was his due, that
the difference was something that he had transferred to the
continuing parners within the meaning of transfer of prop ry
for the purposes of the Gift Tax Act or that there was a gif
liable to gift tax.
The work settlement in the definition of transfer of
property in the Gift Tax Act takes colour from the context
of the definition and its neighbouring words and means a
settlement upon trust and not a settlement of accounts.
The judgment of this Court in Chhotalal Monan Lal
(ipid) needs a brief explanation. When P retired, the firm
was reconstituted and Cs minor sons were admitted to the
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benefits to the partnership with a three annas share at the
same time Cs share was reduc d from seven to four annas.
Necessarilly, therefore, at a notional point of time just
prior to the reconsitution a hree anna share out of C s
seven anna share in the partnership was transferred by c to
his minor sons. There was therefore, a gift by c to his
minor sons of the three anna share, and it was taxable. The
facts of the case before us are differen and this judgment
can be of no assistance.
We think, therefore, that the view taken by the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner, the Tribunal and the High
Court was the right view.
The civil appeal is dismissed.
No order as to costs.