Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 7
PETITIONER:
SOHAN PATHAK AND SONS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, U.P.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
23/09/1953
BENCH:
SASTRI, M. PATANJALI (CJ)
BENCH:
SASTRI, M. PATANJALI (CJ)
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
BOSE, VIVIAN
HASAN, GHULAM
JAGANNADHADAS, B.
CITATION:
1953 AIR 456 1954 SCR 158
ACT:
Excess Profits Tax Act (XV of 1940), ss. 4, 5, 10-A-Hindu
undivided family-Partial partition dividing assets and
liabilities of business among members-Members carrying on
business as partners-Validity of partition-Artificial
transaction for reducing liability to excess profits tax.
HEADNOTE:
A Hindu undivided family carried on business in money lend-
ing and brocade. On the 16th July, 1943, there was a
partial partition amongst the members by which the brocade
business was divided and its assets and liabilities were
partitioned in equal shares between the members of the
family. On the next day the adult members of the family
formed two partnerships admitting minors to the benefit
thereof, and carried on the brocade business under two
separate firm names though they continued to remain joint in
status. The Income-tax Officer accepted the partial parti-
tion and treated the brocade business of the family as
having been discontinued, but the Excess Profits Tax Officer
held that as the main purpose of the partial partition was
avoidance of tax, it was an artificial transaction, and,
treating the business as -unbroken, made adjustments under
s. 10-A of the Excess Profits Tax Act, by adding to the
profits made by the assessees as a joint family till the
date of the partition, the profits made by the two firms
after partition during the chargeable accounting period :
Held, (i) under ss. 4 and 5 of the Excess Profits Tax Act,
the Act can have no application to a business which did not
make any profits during the relevant chargeable accounting
period, and, as the old joint family business in brocade was
discontinued and earned no profit during the chargeable
accounting period in question, the appellants were not
liable to be taxed as a Hindu undivided family in respect of
that business;
(ii)that the issue whether the Excess Profits Tax Act
applies to a particular business must be determined solely
with reference to s. 5 of the Act, and s. 10-A must be
construed as applicable only to cases where, the business
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 7
being found to be one to which the Act applies, a
transaction of the kind referred to in the section has been
effected; and in view of the finding that the old joint
family business in brocade was wound up and was no longer
carried on by the joint family as such during the relevant
chargeable accounting periods, the same business could not
be
159
legally treated as having continued unbroken in respect of
such periods for the purpose of s. 10-A of the Excess
Profits Tax Act read with ss. 4 and 5 of the same Act.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 47 to 50 of
1952. -
Appeals from the Judgment and Decree dated the 11th
May,1950, of the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad
(Malik C. J. and Bhargava J.) in Miscellaneous Case No. 134
of 1949 connected with Miscellaneous Case No. 197 of 1948.
G.S. Pathak (G. C. Mathur, with him) for the appellant.
M.C. Setalvad, Attorney-General for India, (G. N. Joshi,
with him) for the respondent.
1953. September 23. The Judgment of the Court was
delivered by
PATANJALI SASTRI C. J.-This batch of appeals arises out of a
reference made to the High Court at Allahabad by the Income-
tax Appellate Tribunal, Allahabad Bench, under section 26 of
the Excess Profits Tax Act, hereinafter referred to as " the
Act." The assessments challenged in these appeals relate to
different chargeable accounting periods but the questions
raised are the same in all the cases.
The appellants constitute a Hindu undivided family
consisting of four branches representing the four sons of
one Sohan Pathak deceased. The family carried on business
at Banaras in money-lending and Banaras brocade under the
name and style of Sohan Pathak & Sons. In the assessment
relating to the chargeable accounting period ending on
October 8, 1943, the appellants alleged that there was a
partial partition among the members of the family on July
16, 1943, whereby the Banaras brocade business was divided
in equal shares among the four branches and that, on the
next day, the adult members of the family formed two
partnerships admitting the minors to the benefits thereof,
and thereafter carried on business in Banaras
160
brocade under the respective firm names of Sohan Pathak
Girdhar Pathak and G. M. Pathak & Co. The appellants claimed
that the family as such ceased to carry on business in
Banaras brocade after July 16, 1943, though they continued
to remain joint in status and that the profits derived by
the two partnerships aforesaid after July 17, 1943, could
not be assessed as profits of the original joint family
business, as the businesses carried on by the two
partnerships were distinct and newly started businesses and
could neither in law nor in fact be regarded as continuation
of the old brocade business. In support of this claim the
appellants strongly relied on the circumstance that the
Income-tax Officer treated the old business as discontinued
by the family after the partial partition and granted relief
on that footing under section 25(3) of the Indian Income-tax
Act in the assessment to income-tax of the appellants as a
Hindu undivided family. The Excess Profits Tax Officer,
however, rejected the claim as he was of opinion that the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 7
main purpose of the partial partition and the creation of
the two partnerships was to avoid or reduce the liability of
the appellants to excess profits tax, and he made
adjustments under section 10-A of the Act by adding to the
profits made by the appellants as a joint Hindu family till
the date of the partition the profits made by the two firms
during the chargeable accounting periods. The Appellate
Assistant Commissioner and the Appellate Tribunal confirmed
the finding and order of the Excess Profits Tax Officer,
but, at the instance of the appellants, the Tribunal
referred the following questions to the High Court for its
decision:
1.Whether in view of the fact that the partial partition bad
been accepted by the Income-tax Officer and the business was
treated as having been discontinued for the purpose of
assessment under the Income-tax Act, the same business could
legally be treated as having continued unbroken in respect
of the same chargeable accounting period for the purpose of
section 10-A of the Excess Profits Tax Act read with
sections 4 and 5 of the same Act ?
161
2.Whether in the circumstances of the case the effect of the
partial partition of the Hindu undivided family on July 16,
1943, and the formation of two different firms was a
transaction within the meaning of section 10-A of the Excess
Profits Tax Act ?
3.Whether on the facts found by the Tribunal as stated in
para. 7 of the statement of the case, it was justified to
draw the inference that the main purpose behind the partial
partition was the avoidance or reduction of liability to
excess profits tax ?
The court answered these questions against the appellants
but granted leave to appeal to this court.
At a previous hearing of these appeals this court was of
opinion that the material facts relating to the partial
partition and the formation of the partnership and the
findings of the Tribunal in regard thereto had not been
clearly stated by the Tribunal in the original statement of
the case. The court said:
" While it is true that in one place in the statement of
case the Tribunal speaks of the old family brocade business
as continuing without a break after the partial partition,
reference is made in another place to the assets of that
business having been equally divided among the four branches
forming the family. There is thus no clear finding as to
how the partition of the brocade business was actually
effected-whether by a division in shares, each branch
holding its share in severalty and the business being
carried on as before on a partnership basis, or whether by
an actual distribution and allotment of specific assets and
liabilities among the branches resulting in the disruption
of that business."
The court accordingly by its order of January 12, 1953,
called for a further and clearer statement of the facts on
the points indicated.
The Tribunal has since submitted a supplementary statement
of the case fully setting out the details of the partition
arrangement and the constitution of the two firms by the
members of the family after the partition. The statement
reveals that the bulk of the
162
capital as well as all " the stock in trade, the cash in
hand, the cash in banks, all outstandings as on that date as
also the sundry liabilities up to that day " were divided
amongst each of the 14 coparceners each branch being
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 7
allotted a four-anna share as stated in the schedule filed
by the assessees and annexed to the statement, showing that
the partition was by specific distribution of the assets and
liabilities and not by a division of shares merely. With
the assets and liabilities thus distributed, the two
partnerships separately carried on brocade businesses
similar to the one carried on by the joint family before the
partial partition. The names of the partners of the two
firms are mentioned and it appears that each firm consisted
of members representing all the four branches, some of them
being adults and some minors, the minors in each case being
only admitted to the benefits of -the partnerships.
On these facts it was contended by Mr. Pathak on behalf of
the appellants that the finding of the Excess Profits Tax
Officer that the main purpose of the partial partition and
the formation of the new partnerships was to avoid or reduce
the liability of the appellants to excess profits tax was
not supported by any material on record. Secondly, assuming
that there was material on which the officer could have come
to such a finding, the old family business in Banaras
brocade having been actually closed down, the officer had no
power in assessing the profits of that business to make
adjustments under section 10-A of the Act by adding the
profits made by the two firms after July 17, 1943. And
lastly, and alternatively, there was undoubtedly a change in
the persons carrying on the old business after July 16,
1943, even if it were regarded as still continuing, the
Hindu undivided family being a "person" [section 2(17)]
distinct from the individuals Composing it, and such
business’ must, under section 8(1), be deemed for all the
purposes of the Act (except for one not material here) to
have been discontinued and a new business to have been
commenced, and the same consequences followed. Mr. Patbak
did not argue
163
that the partial partition and the constitution of the two
partnerships were not "transactions" within the meaning of
section 10-A. Nor did he insist that the acceptance of the
partition and allowance of relief by the Income-tax Officer
under section 25(4) of the Income-tax Act concluded the
matter for purposes of section 10-A of the Act, as appears
to have been contended in the earlier stages of these
proceedings.
The first contention can be disposed of in a few words. It
appears from the facts found by the tax authorities as well
as by the Appellate Tribunal that the partial partition and
the formation of the partnerships were brought about at a
time when the profits of the Banaras brocade business showed
a definitely upward trend. If the main purpose of these
transactions was not to evade liability to excess profits
tax, the appellants were asked to explain what the purpose
was, and they said that they wanted to protect the interests
of the minor members whose shares in the partnership assets
would not be liable for the losses, if any, of the firms,
while the entire family properties would be liable for any
loss incurred in the family business. This explanation was
not acceptable because such protection was not thought of
when the family business was earning smaller profits and
also because, according to the constitution of the
partnerships, while each branch was given the same 4as.
interest, the responsibility for losses falling on the
branch which had no minor members would be heavier than what
would be borne by the branch which had no adult members, a
disparity which the purpose put forward by the appellants
failed to explain. In these circumstances we agree with the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 7
High Court -in holding that there was sufficient material to
support the inference drawn by the Appellate Tribunal that
the main purpose behind the partial partition and the
formation of the partnerships was the avoidance or reduction
of liability of the family business to excess profits tax.
The real and substantial question in the appeals is whether
in view of the finding of fact that the old family business
was wound up, its assets and liabilities
164
having been actually distributed among the coparceners, and
was no longer carried on by the joint family as such during
the relevant chargeable accounting periods,’ section 10-A
has any application to the case. Question No. 1, which is
supposed to have raised this point, was not happily framed.
As already stated, Mr. Pathak did not argue that the Income-
tax Officer’s finding as to the discontinuance of the old
family business precluded the Excess Profits Tax Officer
from considering the issue. It is now well settled that,
for the purposes of the Act, a business is a unit of assess-
ment, and the charging section 4 provides for the tax being
levied in respect of the profits of " any business to which
this Act applies." Section 5 specifies the businesses to
which the Act applies, and they are businesses " of which
any part of the profits made during the chargeable
accounting period is chargeable to income-tax " by virtue of
certain specified provisions of the Indian Income-tax Act,
1922. There are some provisos to this section, one of which
excludes the application of the Act to " any business the
whole of the profits of which accrue or arise in a Part B
State." It is thus manifest that the Act can have no
application to a business which did not make any profits
during the relevant chargeable accounting period. In other
words, if a business, having been discontinued, earned no
profit during the chargeable accounting period in question,
no excess profits tax can be charged in respect of such
business, and that being the position here as respects the
old joint family business in Banaras brocade, the appellants
are not liable to be taxed as a Hindu undivided family in
respect of that business.
But, argues the learned Attorney-General, that result cannot
follow by reason of section 10-A of the Act which runs as
follows:
10-A. Transactions designed to avoid or reduce liability to
exces profits tax.-(1) Where the Excess Profits Tax Officer
is of the opinion that the main purpose for which any
transaction or transactions was or were effected - (whether
before or after the passing of the
165
Excess Profits Tax (Second Amendment) Act, 1941) was the
avoidance or reduction of liability to excess profits tax,
he may, with the previous approval of the Inspecting
Assistant Commissioner, make such adjustments as respects
liability to excess profits tax as he considers appropriate
so as to counteract the avoidance or reduction of liability
to excess profits tax which would otherwise be effected by
the transaction or transactions.
This provision, it is claimed, empowers the Excess Profits
Tax Officer to ignore any transaction (s) the main purpose
of which was the avoidance or reduction of liability to
excess profits tax and to proceed on the footing that such
transactions) had not been effected, and, in the present
case, the partial partition as well as the subsequent
formation of the partnerships having been found to be
transactions the main purpose of which was the avoidance or
reduction of liability to excess profits tax, the officer
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 7
had authority to assess the appellants’ old family business
in Banaras brocade on the basis of its continued existence
during the relevant chargeable accounting periods. We are
unable to accept this contention.
If, under section 4 of the Act read with section 5, the old
joint family business cannot be regarded as one " to which
this Act applies," section 10-A, one of the provisions of
the Act, can have no application to such business. The
learned Attorney-General’s argument that sections 4 and 5
must be read along with section 10-A in determining whether
the Act applies to any particular business or not involves
the fallacy that, in determining the initial issue whether
the Act does or does not apply to a given business, you have
to look not merely at the provision which defines the scope
and application of the Act but other provisions also which
presuppose its application. We are of opinion that the
issue whether the Act applies or not to a particular
business must be determined solely with reference to section
5, and section 10-A must be construed as
23
166
applicable only to cases where, the business being found to
be one to which the Act applies, a transaction of the kind
referred to in the section has been effected. The learned
Attorney-General conceded that, if a person who had been
paying excess profits tax transferred the business to a Part
B State, it would not be competent for the Excess Profits
Tax Officer to take action under section 10-A to make
adjustments on the footing that the assessee continued to
carry on his business in the same place as before such
transfer, even if it was found that the transfer was
effected for the main purpose of avoiding or reducing his
liability to excess profits tax. In that case, the
Attorney-General admitted, the Officer would be running
counter to the express prohibition contained in the proviso
to section 5 to which reference has been made and he did not
challenge the correctness of a decision to that effect by
the Bombay High Court, (Commissioner of Excess Profits Tax,
Bombay City v. Moholal Maganlal) (1). But we fail to
appreciate the distinction in principle between that case
and the present, for, to both alike the Act is made
inapplicable by section 5. The reasoning of the learned
Judges in the Bombay case, namely, that if the Act is
inapplicable to a particular business and there would thus
be no liability to excess profits tax in respect of that
business, no question could arise of avoiding or reducing
any liability to excess profits tax under section 10-A,
would equally apply to the present case and must lead to the
same result.
Reference was made by the Attorney-General in the course of
his argument to the proviso to section 2(5) which says that
" all businesses to which this Act applies carried on by the
same person shall be treated as one business for the
purposes of this Act." We find it difficult to appreciate
the bearing of this section on the point at issue. It is
clear that the proviso can operate in respect of businessess
to which the Act applies and not otherwise, and it carries
the, matter no further.
(1) [1953] 23 1. T. R, 45.
167
In the view we have expressed above, it is unnecessary to
deal with the alternative contention based on section 8(1)
of the Act.
We allow the appeals, set aside the answer made by the High
Court to question No. 1 and answer it as follows: In view of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 7
the finding of fact that the old joint family business in
Banaras brocade was wound up and was no longer carried on by
the joint family as such during the relevant chargeable
accounting periods, the same business could not legally be
treated as having continued unbroken in respect of such
periods for the purpose of section 10-A of the Excess
Profits Tax Act read with sections 4 and 5 of the same Act.
The judgment of the High Court will stand in other respects.
The appellants will have their costs of the appeals.
Advocates’ fee one set.
Appeals allowed.
Agent for the appellants: Naunit Lal.
Agent for the respondent: G. H. Rajadhyaksha.