Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
YOGENDRA NATH NASKAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, CALCUTTA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
18/02/1969
BENCH:
RAMASWAMI, V.
BENCH:
RAMASWAMI, V.
SHAH, J.C.
GROVER, A.N.
CITATION:
1969 AIR 1089 1969 SCR (3) 742
1969 SCC (1) 555
CITATOR INFO :
F 1974 SC1355 (2)
R 1976 SC2520 (19)
RF 1977 SC1523 (28)
ACT:
Income-tax Act (11 of 1922)-Hindu Deity-If can be taxed
through shebaits.
HEADNOTE:
Finding that the assessments of the income from the
properties of two Hindu deities in the hands of its shebaits
as trustees were set aside on the footing that the status of
the assessees had not been correctly determined, the Income-
tax Officer initiated proceedings for the assessments
against the shebaits of the deities and completed the
assessments on the deities in the status of an individual
and through the shebaits. On the question whether the
assessments on the deities through the shebaits were in
accordance with law,
HELD : The Hindu idol is a juristic entity capable of
holding property and of being taxed through its shebaits who
are entrusted with the possession and management of its
property.
A Hindu deity fell within the meaning of the word
’individual’ under s. 3 of the Act and could be treated as a
unit of assessment under the section and was capable of
being taxed through its shebaits. The word ’individual’ in
s. 3 of the 1922 Act included within its connotation all
artificial juridical persons and this legal position was
made explicit and beyond challenge in the 1961 Act. [750 C;
751 D]
Neither God nor any supernatural being could be a person in
law. But so far as the deity stands as the representative
and symbol of the particular purpose which is indicated by
the donor, it can figure as a legal person and in that
capacity alone the dedicated property vests in it. There is
no principle why a deity as such a legal person should not
be taxed if such a legal person is allowed in law to own
property even though in the ideal sense and to sue for the
property, to realise rent and to defend such property in a
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court of law again in the ideal sense. [749 F]
Manohar Ganesh v. Lakshmiram, I.L.R. 12 Bom. 247; Vidyapurna
Tirtha Swami v. Vidvanidhi Tirtha Swami & Ors., I.L.R. 27
Mad. 435; Maharanet Shibessouree Dehia v. Mothocranath
Acharjo, 13 M.L.A. 270; Prosanna Kumari Debya v. Golab Chand
Baboo, L.R. 2 I.A. 145; Pramatha Nath Mullick v. Pradyumna
Kumar Mullick & Ors., 52 I.A. 245; Bhupati v. Ramlal, 10
C.L.J. 355; Hindu Law of Religious & Charitable Trust by Mr.
B. K. Mukherjea; The Commissioner of Income-tax, Madhya
Pradesh & Bhopal v. Sodra Devi, [1958] S.C.R. 1; Cape Brandy
Syndicate v. I.R.C., [1921] 2 K.B. 403 and Attorney General
v. Clarkson, [1900] 1 Q.B. 156, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos. 690 to 694
of 1968.
Appeals from the judgment and order dated April 3, 4, 5,
1965 of the Calcutta High Court in Income-tax Reference No.
50 of 1961.
743
M.C. Chagla and B. P. Maheshwari, for the appellant (in
all the appeals).
S.T. Desai, G. C. Sharma and B. D. Sharma, for the
respondent (in all the appeals).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Ramaswami, J. These appeals are brought from the judgment of
the Calcutta High Court dated 3rd, 4th and 5th April, 1965
in Income Tax Reference No. 50 of 1961 on a certificate
granted under section 66A of the Indian Income Tax, Act,
1922 (hereinafter called the Act).
One Ram Kristo Naskar left a will dated 17th May, 1899 by
which he left certain properties as debuttar to two deities
Sri Iswar Kubereswar Mahadeb Thakur and Sri Sri Anandamoyee
Kalimata in the land adjoining his residential house at
74/75 Beliaghata Main Road. He appointed his two adopted
sons Hem Chandra Naskar (since deceased) and Yogendra Nath
Naskar as the shebaits. Elaborate provision was made as to
the manner in which the income from the property was to be
spent. For a long time the income from the property was
assessed in the hands of the shebaits as trustees. In
respect of the assessment years 1950-51 and 1951-52, the two
shebaits contended that there was no trust executed in the
case and as such the income from the property did not
attract liability to tax and particularly the assessments
made in the name of Hem Chandra Naskar and his brother
Yogendra Nath Naskar as trustees of the debuttar estate
could not be sustained. The Appellate Assistant
Commissioner accepted this contention on appeal and set
aside the assessments. Finding that the assessments have
been set aside on the footing that the status of the
assessees had not been correctly determined the Income Tax
Officer initiated proceedings for the assessment years 1952-
53 and 1953-54 against Hem Chandra Naskar and Yogendra Nath
Naskar, the shebaits of the two deities and completed the
assessments on the deities in the status of an individual
and through the shebaits. The claim for exemption under the
proviso to section 4(3)(i) of the Income Tax Act was
rejected. On appeal the Appellate Assistant Commissioner
upheld the assessment orders of the Income Tax Officer. The
assessee appealed to the Appellate Tribunal and contended
that the deities were not chargeable to tax under s. 3 of
the Act; that section 41 of the Act did not apply to the
facts of the case. Though the shebaits were the managers
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who could come under the ambit of section 41, they had not
been appointed by or under any order of the court and
therefore the ’assessments were invalid and should be set
aside. It was also contended that the case of the trustee
having been specifically given up it would not be open to
the Income Tax
744
Department to bring the shebaits under any of the categories
mentioned in section 41. The departmental representative
contended that the assessments had been made on the,
shebaits not under section 41 as trustees or managers but
that the deities had been assessed as individuals and that
section 41 was a surplusage in making the assessments. The
Tribunal held that though the shebaits were the managers for
the purpose of section 41, they were not so appointed by or
under any order of the court, and, therefore, the second
condition required by section 41 was not fulfilled, and the
shebaits could pot be proceeded against. The Appellate
Tribunal added that the specific provision which the
Tribunal first relied was that of trustees under section 41,
but that case having been given up the further attempt to
assess the shebaits as managers under section 41 could not
be upheld. At the instance of the Commissioner of Income
Tax, the Appellate Tribunal referred the following question
of law for the opinion of the High Court under section 66(1)
of the Act :
"Whether on the facts and in the circumstances
of the case, the assessment on the deities
through the shebaits under the provisions of
section 41 of the Indian Income Tax Act were
in accordance with law ?"
After having heard learned counsel for both
the parties we are satisfied that in the
question referred by the Appellate Tribunal
the words ’under the provisions of section 41
of the Indian Income Tax Act’ should be
deleted as superfluous and the question should
be modified in the following manner to bring
out the question in real controversy between
the parties
"Whether an the facts and in the circumstances
of the case, the assessments on the deities
through the shebaits were in accordance with
law."
The main question hence presented for
determination in these appeals is whether a
Hindu deity can be treated as a unit of
assessment under section 3 and 4 of the Income
Tax Act, 1922.
It is well established by high authorities
that a Hindu idol is a juristic person in whom
the dedicated property vests. In Manohar
Ganesh v. Lakshmiram(1) called the Dakor
temple case, West and Birdwood, if. state :
"The Hindu Law, like the Roman Law and those
derived from it, recognises not only
incorporate bodies with rights of property
vested in the corporation apart
(1) I.L.R. 12 Bom. 247.
745
from its individual members but also
juridical persons called foundations. A Hindu
who wishes to establish a religious or
charitable institution may according to his
law express his purpose and endow it and the
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ruler will give effect to the bounty or at
least, protect it so far at any rate as is
consistent with his own Dharma or conception
or morality. A trust is not required for the
purpose; the necessity of a trust in such a
case is indeed a peculiarity and a modern
peculiarity of the English Law. In early law
a gift placed as it was expressed on the altar
of God, sufficed it to convey to the Church
the lands thus dedicated. It is consistent
with the grants having been made to the
juridical person symbolised or personified in
the idol".
The same view has been expressed by the Madras
High Court in Vidyapurna Tirtha Swami v.
Vidyanidhi Tirtha Swami & Ors.(1) in which Mr.
Justice Subrahmania Ayyar stated:
"It is to give due effect to such a sentiment,
widespread and deep-rooted as it has always
been, with reference to something not capable
of holding property as a natural person, that
the laws of most countries have sanctioned the
creation of a fictitious person in the matter
as is implied in the felicitous observation
made in the work already cited "Perhaps the
oldest of all juristic persons is the God,
hero or the saint" (Pollock and Maitland’s
History of English Law, Volume 1, 481).
That the consecrated idol in a Hindu temple is
a juridical person has been expressly laid
down in Manohar Ganesh’s case (2) which Mr.
Prannath Saraswati, the author of the ’Tagore
Lectures on Endowments’ rightly enough speaks
of as one ranking as the leading case on the
subject, and in which West J., discusses the
whole matter with much erudition. And in more
than one case, the decision of the Judicial
Committee proceeds on precisely the same
footing (Maharanee Shibessouree Dehia v.
Mothocrapath Acharjo(3) and Prosanna Kumari
Debya v. Golab Chand Baboo(4). Such
ascription of legal personality to an idol
must however be incomplete unless it be linked
of human guardians for them variously
designated in Debya v. Golab Chand Baboo(4)
the Judicial Committee observed thus : ’It
is only in an ideal sense that
(1) I.L.R. 27 Mad.435.
(2) I.L.R. 12 Bom. 247.
(3) 13 M.I.A. 270.
(4) L.R. 2 I.A. 145.
746
property can be said to belong to an idol and
the possession and management must in the
nature of things be entrusted with some person
as shebait or manager. It would seem to
follow that the person so entrusted must be
necessity be empowered to do whatever may be
required for the service of the idol and for
the benefit and preservation of its property
at least to as great a degree as the manager
of an infant heir’-words which seem to be
almost on echo of what was said in relation to
a church in a judgment of the days of Edward.
A church is always under age and is to be
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treated as an infant and it is not according
to law that infants should be disinherited by
the negligence of their guardians or ’be
barred of an action in case they would
complain of things wrongfully done by their
guardians while they are under age’ (Pollock
and Maitland’s ’History of English Law’,
Volume 1, 483".
In Pramatha Nath Mullick v. Pradyumna Kumar
Mullick & Ors.(1), Lord Shaw observed :
"A Hindu idol is, according to long
established authority, founded upon the
religious customs of the Hindus, and the
recognition thereof by Courts of law, a
’juristic entity’. It has a juridical status
with the power of suing and being sued. Its
interests are attended to by the person who
has the deity in his charge and who is in law
its manager with all the powers which would,
in such circumstances, on analogy, be given to
the manager of the estate of an infant heir.
It is unnecessary to quote the authorities;
for this doctrine thus simply stated, is
firmly established".
It should however be remembered that the
juristic person in the idol is not the
material image, and it is an exploded theory
that the image itself develops into a legal
person as soon as it is consecrated and
vivified by the Pran Pratishta ceremony. It
is not also correct that the supreme being of
which the idol is A symbol or image is the
recipient and owner of the dedicated property.
This is clearly Jaid down in authoritative
Sanskrit Texts. Thus, in his Bhashya on the
Purva Mimamsa, Adhyaya 9, Pada 1, Sabara Swami
states :
(1) 52 I.A. 245.
747
"Words such as ’Village of the Gods’, ’land of the Go&’ are
used in a figurative sense. That is property which can be
said to belong to a person, which he can make use of as he
desires. God however does not make use of the, village or
lands, according to its desires". Likewise, Medhathithi in
commenting on the expression ’Devaswam’ in Manu, Chapter XI,
Verse 26 writes
"Property of the Gods, Devaswam, means whatever is abandoned
for Gods, for purposes of sacrifice and the like, because
ownership in the primary sense, as showing the relationship
between the owner and the property owned, is impossible of
application, to Gods". Thus, according to the texts, the
Gods have no beneficial enjoyment of the properties, and
they can be described as their owners only in a figurative
sense (Gaunartha). The correct legal position is that the
idol as representing and embodying the spiritual purpose of
the donor is the juristic person recognised by law and in
this juristic person the dedicated property vests. As
observed by Mr. Justice B. K. Mukherjea:
"With regard to Debutter, the position seems
to be somewhat different. What is personified
here, is not the entire property which is
dedicated to the deity but the deity itself
which is the central part of the foundation
and stands as the material symbol and
embodiment of the pious purpose which the
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dedicator has in view. "The dedication to
deity", said Sir Lawrence Jenkins in Bhupati
v. Ramlal(1) "is nothing but a compendious
expression of the pious purpose for which the
dedication is designed". It is not only a
compendious expression but a material
embodiment of the pious purpose and though
there is difficulty in holding that property
can reside in the aim or purpose itself, it
would be quite consistent with sound
principles of Jurisprudence to say that a
material object which represents or symbolises
a particular purpose can be given the status
of a legal person, and regarded as owner of
the property which is dedicated to it."(2)
The legal position is comparable in many
respects to the, development in Roman Law. So
far as charitable endowment is concerned Roman
Law-as later developed recognised two kinds of
juristic persons. One was a corporation or
aggregate of
(1) 10 C.L.J. 355 at 369.
(2) Hindu Law of Religious & Charitable
Trust by Mr. B.K, Mukherjee.
748
persons which owed its juristic personality to
State sanction. A private person might make
over property by way of gift or legacy to a
corporation already in existence and might at
the same time prescribe the particular purpose
for which the property was to be employed e.g.
feeding the poor or giving relief to- the
poor distressed. The recipient corporate
would be in a position of a trustee and would
be legally bound to spend the funds for the
particular purpose. The other alternative was
for the donor to create an institution or
foundation himself. This would be a new
juristic person which depended for its origin
upon nothing else but the will of the founder
provided it was directed to a charitable
purpose. The foundation would be the owner of
the dedicated property in the eye of law and
the administrators would be in the position of
trustees bound to carry out the object of the
foundation. As observed by Sohm :
"During the later Empire--from the fifth
century onwards-foundations created by private
individuals came to be recognised as
foundations in the true legal sense, but only
if they took the form of a ipia cause’ (’pium
corpus’) i.e. were devoted to ’pious uses’,
only in short, if they were charitable
institutions. Wherever a person dedicated
property-whether by gift inter vivos or by
will--in favour of the poor, or the sick, or
prisoners, orphans, or aged people, he thereby
created ipso facto a new subject of legal
rights the poor-house, the hospital, and so
forth-and the edicated property became the
sole property of this new subject; it became
the sole property of the new juristic person
whom the founder had called into being. Roman
law, however, took the view that the
endowments of charitable foundations were a
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species of Church property. Piae cause were
subjected to the control of the Church, that
is, of the bishop or the ecclesiastical
administrator, as the case might be. A pia
causa was regarded as an ecclesiastical, and
consequently, as a public institution, and as
such it shared that corporate capacity which
belonged to all ecclesiastical institutions by
virtue of a general rule of law. A pia causa
did not require to have a juristic personality
expressly coffered upon it. According to
Roman law the act-whether a gift inter vivos
or a testamentary disposition-whereby the
founder dedicated property to charitable uses
was sufficient, without more, to constitute
the pia cause a foundation in the legal sense,
to make it, in other words, a new subject of
legal rights"(1).
(1) Institute of Roman Law, 3rd Edition pp. 197-198.
749
We should, in this context, make a distinction between the
spiritual and the legal aspect of the Hindu idol which is
installed and worshipped. From the spiritual standpoint the
idol may be to the worshipper a symbol (pratika) of the
Supreme Godhead intended to invoke a sense of the vast and
intimate reality, and suggesting the essential truth of the
Real that is beyond all name or form. It is basic postulate
of Hindu religion that different images do ’not represent
different divinities, they are really symbols of One Supreme
Spirit and in whichever name or form the deity is invoked,
the Hindu worshipper purports to worship the Supreme Spirit
and nothing else.
(Rig Vedda 1. 1.64)
(They have spoken of Him as Agni, Mitra, Varuna, Indra; the
one Existence the sages speak of in many). The Bhagavad
Gita echoes this verse when it says
(Chap. xi- 39)
(Thou art Vayu and Yama, Agni, Varuna and Moon; Lord of
creation art Thou, and Grandsire).
Samkara, the great philosopher, refers to the one Reality,
who, owing to the diversity or intellects (matibheda) is
conventionally spoken of (parikalpya) in various ways as
Brahma, Visnu and Mahesvara. It is however possible that
the founder of the endowment of the worshipper may not
conceive on this highest spiritual plane but hold that the
idol is the very embodiment of a personal God, but that is
not a matter with which the law is concerned. Neither God
nor any supernatural being could be a person in law. But so
far as the deity stands as the representative and symbol of
the particular purpose which is indicated by the donor, it
can figure as a legal person. The true legal view is that
in that capacity alone the dedicated property vests in it.
There is no principle why a deity as such a legal person
should not be taxed if such a legal person is allowed in law
to own property even though in the ideal sense and to sue
for the property, to realise rent and to defend such
property in a of law again in the ideal sense. Our
conclusion is that the Hindu idol is a juristic entity
capable of holding property and of being taxed through its
shebaits who are entrusted with the possession and
management of its property. It was argued on behalf of the
appellant that the word ’individual’ in s. 3 of the Act
should not be construed as including a Hindu deity because
it was not a real but a juristic person. We are unable to
accept this argument as correct. We see no reason why the
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meaning
10Sup./69-13
750
of the word ’individual’ in section 3 of the Act should be
restricted to human being and not to juristic entities. In
The Commissioner of Income Tax, Madhya Pradesh & Bhopal v.
Sodra Devi(1) Mr. Justice Bhagwati pointed out as follows :
"the word ’individual’ has not been defined in
the Act and there is authority, for the
proposition that the word ’individual’ does
not mean only a human being but is wide enough
to include a group of persons forming a unit.
It has been held that the word ’individual’
includes a Corporation created by a statute,
e.g., a University or a Bar Council, or the
trustees of a baronetcy trust incorporated by
a Baronetcy Act".
We are accordingly of opinion that a Hindu
deity falls within the meaning of the word
’individual" under section 3 of the Act and
can be treated as a unit of assessment under
that section.
On behalf of the appellant Mr. Chagla referred
to section 2 sub-section (31) of the Income
Tax Act, 1961 (Act No. 49 of 1961) which
states :
"2. In this Act, unless the context otherwise
requires-
(31) ’person’ includes-
(i) an individual,
(ii) a Hindu undivided family,
(iii) a company,
(iv) a firm,
(v) an association of persons or a body of
individuals, whether incorporated or not,
(vi) a local authority, and
(vii)every artificial juridical person, not
falling within any of the preceding sub-
clauses".
Counsel also referred to S. 2(9) and S. 3 of
the Income Tax Act, 1922 which state:
"2. In this Act, unless there is anything
repugnant in the subject or context-
(9)’Person’ includes Hindu undivided family
and local authority".
(1) (1958] S.C.R. I at P. 6.
751
"3. Where any Central Act enacts that income-
tax shall be charged for any year at any rate
or rates, tax at that rate or those rates
shall be charged for that year in accordance
with, and subject to the provisions of, this
Act in respect of the total income of the pre-
vious year of every individual, Hindu
undivided family, company and local authority,
and of every firm and other association of
persons or the partners of the firm or the
members of the association individually".
On a comparison of the provisions of the two
Acts counsel on behalf of the appellant
contended that a restricted meaning should be
given to the word. ’individual’ in section 3
of the earlier Act. We see no justification
for this argument. On the other hand, we are
of the opinion that the language employed in
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1961 Act may be relied upon as a Parliamentary
exposition of the earlier Act even on the
assumption that the language employed in
section 3 of the earlier Act is ambiguous. It
is clear that the word ’individual’ in section
3 of the 1922 Act includes within its
connotation all artificial juridical persons
and this legal position is made explicit and
beyond challenge in the 1961 Act. In Cape
Brandy Syndicate v. I.R.C. (1), Lord Sterndale
R. said :
"I think it is clearly established in Attorney
General v. Clarkson (2) that subsequent
legislation may be looked at in order to see
the proper construction to be put upon an
earlier Act where that earlier Act is
ambiguous. I quite agree that subsequent
legislation if it procedure on an erroneous
construction of previous legislationcannot
alter that previous legislation; but if there
be any ambiguity in the earlier legislation,
then the subsequent legislation may fix the
proper interpretation which is to be put upon
the earlier Act".
For the reasons expressed we hold that the question of law
referred by the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal and as
modified by us should be answered in the affirmative and in
favour of the Commissioner of Income-tax. We accordingly
dismiss these appeals with costs. One hearing fee.
Y.P.
Appeals dismissed.
(1) [1921] 2 K.B. 403.
(2) [1900] 1 Q.B. 156,163,164.
752