Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 12
PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF WEALTH TAX,GUJARAT-III, AHMEDABAD
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ELLIS BRIDGE GYMKHANA ETC. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 21/10/1997
BENCH:
SUHAS C. SEN, S. SAGHIR AHMAD
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
THE 21ST DAY OF OCTOBER, 1997
Present:
Hon’ble Mr. Justice Suhas C. Sen
Hon’ble Mr. Justice S.Saghir Ahmad
T.A.Ramachandran
K.N. Shukla, Sr.Advs.,Ms.Renu George, B.K.Prasad,
P.Parmeswaran, D.S.Mehra, S.N.Terdol, K.J.John,
Ms. Manju Mishra, R.A.Perumal, S. Sukumaran, S.K.Pasi,
Mrs. Janki Ramachandran, Mukul Mudgal, (Mrs. M.
Karanjawala,) Adv. (NP), S.S.Khanduja, Y.P.Dhingra and
B.K.satija, Advs. with them for the appearing parties.
J U D G M E N T
The following Judgment of the Court was delivered:
[WITH C.A. Nos. 3210-14/88, 1544/93, 1649/93, 5340-48/93,
5393/94, 948/95, 8347/95, 1796-1799/96, SLP (C) Nos.
2490/84, C.A.Nos. 4674/95, 2517/96, 9096/96, 3532-38/88, SLP
(C) Nos. 7246-7250/97, C.A.Nos.2366-2375/94, SLP (C) Nos.
16259-16275/94 with C.A. No.658/93 with C.A. Nos. 7420-22 of
1997 @ SLP (C) Nos. 4658-60/1990
J U D G M E N T
SEN, J.
This is an appeal from an order passed by the High
Court of Gujarat in which following question of law was
answered in the affirmative and in favour of the assessee:
"Whether on the facts and in the
circumstance of the case, the
Appellate Tribunal has been right
in law in holding that the assessee
is not liable to Wealth Tax under
Wealth-tax Act, 1957 for the
assessment year in question?"
The assessment years involved are 1970-71 to 1977-78.
The assessee is a club. It filed its return of wealth being
called upon to do so for the aforesaid assessment years but
contended that it was not liable to be assessed under the
Wealth Tax Act, 1957 at all. The Wealth Tax Officer rejected
the claim of the assessee. The Appellate Assistant
Commissioner was of the view that the assessee could not be
brought to tax under the Act because of the earlier decision
of Gujarat High Court in the case of Orient Club v. Wealth
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 12
Tax Officer, 123 ITR 395. The Tribunal dismissed the appeal
upholding the order of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner.
The question of law raised by the Revenue was answered by
the High Court also in favour of the assessee.
The Club was not incorporated under the Companies Act,
1956. The case of the Revenue is that the club will have to
be assessed as an "individual" under the Wealth Tax Act.
Section 3 which is the charging section of the Act is as
under:
"3. (1) Subject to the other
provisions contained in this Act,
there shall be charged for every
assessment year commencing on and
from the first day of April, 1957
but before the first day of April,
1993, a tax (hereinafter referred
to as wealth-tax) in respect of the
net wealth on the corresponding
valuation date of every individual.
Hindu undivided family and company
at the rate or rates specified in
Schedule 1.
(2) x x
x"
Three units of assessment have been mentioned in the
charging section; "individual, Hindu undivided family and
company". The contention of the Revenue is that "individual"
has to be understood broadly so as to include as association
of persons like clubs.
The rule of construction of a charging section is that
before taxing any person, it must be shown that he falls
within the ambit of the charging section by clear words used
in the section. No one can be taxed by implication. A
charging section has to be construed strictly. If a person
has not been brought within the ambit of the charging
section by clear words, he cannot be taxed at all.
Unlike Income Tax Act which is also a direct tax, the
charging section does not speak of a body of individuals or
an association of persons or a firm. If the legislative
intent was to tax the wealth of a body of individuals or an
association of persons or a firm, the Legislature would have
said so in so many words as was done in the Indian Income
Tax Act, 1922 or Income Tax Act, 1961. Under Section 3 of
the Indian Income Tax Act, 1922, the charge was on
"individual, Hindu undivided family, company, local
authority, firm and other association of persons or the
partners of a firm or the members of the association
individually". When the Wealth Tax Act, 1957 was passed, the
Legislature decided to specify only "individual, Hindu
undivided family and company" as units of assessment. It
will not be right to presume that the Legislature was
unaware of the wording of the charging provisions of Indian
Income Tax Act, 1922 when the Wealth Tax Act was enacted.
The Legislature must be presumed to have known the large
number of cases that were heard and decided on the scope of
the charging section under the Indian Income Tax Act and the
meaning ascribed to "association of persons" therein. The
Legislature, however, decided to exclude "firms, association
of persons and body of individuals" from the ambit of charge
of Wealth Tax. What has been specifically left out by the
Legislature cannot be brought back within the ambit of the
charging section by implication or by ascribing an extended
meaning to the word "individual" so as to include whatever
has been left out.
It has also to be noted that the charge under the Gift-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 12
Tax Act, 1958, a contemporaneous statute is on a gift made
by a "person". "Person" has ben defined by Section 2 (xviii)
as under:
"‘person’ includes a Hindu
undivided family or a company or an
association or a body of
individuals or persons, whether
incorporated or not"
Moreover, in the Income Tax Act, 1961, Section 4 which
is the charging section imposes a tax on the total income of
every person. ‘Person’ has been defined by Section 2(3) of
the Act as under:
"(31) ‘person’ includes-
(i) 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."
It will be seen from the above that just like the
Indian Income Tax Act, 1922, in the Gift Tax Act, 1958 and
the Income Tax Act, 1961, an association of persons or body
of individuals have been specifically brought in as units of
assessment. It is only under the Wealth Tax Act, the charge
is on "every individual, Hindu undivided family and a
company" and not on association of persons or a body of
individuals or a firm. If the language of Section 3 of the
Wealth Tax Act is contrasted with the provisions of other
cognate statutes it will clearly appear that the intention
of the legislature was not to treat an association of
persons or a body of individuals or a firm as an unit of
assessment for the purpose of imposition of Wealth Tax.
There is no other explanation why these units of assessment
which have been specifically made taxable under the Indian
Income Tax Act, 1922, the Gift Tax Act, 1958 and Income Tax
Act, 1961 have been left out of the charging section of the
Wealth Tax Act.
It is also to be noted that when the Wealth Tax Act was
passed in 1957, Indian Income Tax Act, 1922 was in force.
The scheme and structure of the Wealth Tax Act are very
similar to the Act of 1922. In fact, some of the provisions
of Wealth Tax Act are almost verbatim reproduction of the
corresponding provisions of the Indian Income Tax Act,
1922.
The charge of wealth tax imposed by Section 3 is in
respect of the net wealth on the corresponding valuation
date of every individual, Hindu undivided family and the
Company. Valuation date has been defined by Section 2(q) to
mean the last day of the previous year as defined in Section
3 of the Income-tax Act, if an assessment was to be made
under that Act for that year. Proviso(i) to Section 2(q)
lays down that where in the case of an assessee there are
different previous years under the Income-tax Act for
different sources of income, the valuation date for the
purposes of this Act shall be the last day of the last of
the previous year. This proviso was deleted by the Direct
Tax Laws (Amendment) Act, 1987, with effect from 1.4.1989.
Section 2(b) defines Appellate Tribunal to mean the
Tribunal constituted under Section 252 of the Indian Income-
tax Act. Various authorities under the Act like Chief
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 12
Commissioner, Commissioner, Additional Commissioner of
Income Tax, Assistant Commissioner of Income Tax have been
given the meanings respectively assigned to them under
Section 2 of the Income-tax Act. Section 16(3) of the
Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 lays down that in computing the
total income of any individual for the purpose of
assessment, the income of a wife or minor child of such
individual will have to be included if he wife is member of
a firm of which the husband is a partner or if a minor is
admitted to the benefit of the partnership of which the
father of the minor is a partner. There were also provisions
for including in the income of an assessee income from
assets transferred directly or indirectly to his wife
otherwise than for adequate consideration or in connection
with an agreement to live apart. Lastly, Section 16(3)
provides that an income from assets transferred by a person
for the benefit of his wife or a minor child or both
otherwise than for adequate consideration will be included
in the income of the person concerned. Similar provisions
have been made in Section 4 (1) (a) of the Wealth Tax Act.
Section 8 of the Wealth Tax Act provides that the
Income Tax authorities specified under Section 116 of the
Income Tax Act shall be the Wealth Tax authorities for the
purposes of the Wealth Tax Act and every such authority
shall exercise the powers and perform the functions of the
Wealth Tax authority in respect of any individual, Hindu
Undivided Family or a Company, and for this purpose his
jurisdiction shall be the same as he had under the Income
Tax Act by virtue of orders or directions issued under
Section 120 of that Act or under any other provisions of
that Act. Section 8B confers power of transfer of cases on
the Commissioner from one officer to another. This provision
is almost identical with the provisions of sub-section (7A)
of Section 5 of the Income Tax Act. Chapter IV of the Wealth
Tax Act deals with assessment and the provisions are similar
to the corresponding provisions of the Income Tax Act. A
return of wealth has to be filed by an assessee if his net
wealth exceeded the maximum amount which is not chargeable
to wealth tax in the prescribed form and verified in the
prescribed manner on or before the "due date". Explanation
to Section 14 clarified that "due date" in relation to
assessee under this Act shall be the same date as that
applicable to an assessee under the Income Tax Act under the
Explanation to sub-section (1) of Section 139 of the Income
Tax Act.
Just as in the Income Tax Act, 1922 Section 15 of the
Wealth Tax Act provides that if any person does not file a
return within the time prescribed by the statute or having
furnished a return, discovers any omission or wrong
statement in the return, he may furnish a revised return at
any time before the expiry of one year from end of the
relevant assessment year or before the completion of the
assessment whichever is earlier. There are provisions for
provisional assessment under Section 15C similarly to
Section 23B of the Indian Income Tax Act, 1992. Section 16
which deals with assessment is similar to Section 23 of the
Income Tax Act. After completion of assessment if the
assessing office has reason to believe that the net wealth
chargeable to tax has escaped assessment, he is empowered to
issue a notice under sub-section (1) of Section 17. These
provisions are similar to corresponding provisions of
Section 34 of the Income Tax Act of 1992. The penalty
provisions in Section 18 are similar to provisions of
Section 28 of the Income Tax Act. Provisions for appeal
against an order of assessment of penalty are provided by
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 12
Section 23. There are also provisions for further appeal to
the Appellate Tribunal. The Commissioner has been given
power to revise orders on his own motion pr on an
application made by the assessee under Section 25. All these
provisions are almost identically worded with the
corresponding provisions of the Income Tax Act, 1922. A
reference lies from an order of the Appellate Tribunal to
the High Court under Section 27 in respect of any question
of law arising out of the appellate order. From the order
passed by the High Court on reference, an appeal lies to the
Supreme Court under Section 29.
All these provisions go to show that the Wealth Tax Act
has been drafted on the same lines as the Indian Income Tax,
1922. There is great similarity of wording between the
various provisions of Wealth Tax Act and corresponding
provisions of Indian Income Tax Act, 1922. But in the case
of the charging Section 3 of the Wealth Tax Act, the
phraseology of the charging section 3 of Indian Income Tax
Act, 1922 has not been adopted.
Unlike Section 3 of the Income Tax Act, Section 3 of the
Wealth Tax Act does not mention a firm or an association of
persons or a body individuals as taxable units of
assessment.
The position has been placed beyond doubt by insertion
of Section 21AA in the Wealth Tax Act itself. This amendment
was effected by the Finance Act, 1981 with effect from
1.4.1981. It provides for assessment of association of
persons in certain special cases and not otherwise. Section
21AA is:
"Assessment when assets are held by
certain association of persons
21AA. (1) Where assets chargeable
to tax under this Act are held by
an association of persons, other
than a company or co-operative
society or society registered under
the Societies Registration Act,
1860 (21 of 1860) or under any law
corresponding to that Act in force
in any part of India, and the
individual shares of the members of
the said association in the income
or assets or both of the said
association on the date of its
formation or at any time thereafter
are indeterminate or unknown, the
wealth-tax shall be levied upon and
recovered from such association in
the like manner and to the same
extent as it would be leviable upon
and recoverable from an individual
who is a citizen of India and
resident in India for the purposes
of this Act.
(2) Where any business or
profession carried on by an
association of persons referred to
in sub-section (1) has been
discontinued or where such
association of persons is
dissolved, the Assessing Officer
shall make an assessment of the net
wealth of the association of
persons as if no such
discontinuance or dissolution had
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 12
taken place and all the provisions
of this had taken place and all the
provisions of this Act, including
the provisions relating to the levy
of penalty or any other sum
chargeable under any provisions of
this Act, so far as may be, shall
apply to such assessment.
(3) Without prejudice to the
generality of the provisions of
sub-section (2), if the Assessing
Officer or the Deputy Commissioner
(Appeals) or the Commissioner
(appeals) in the course of any
proceedings under this Act in
respect of any such association of
persons as is referred to in sub-
section (1) is satisfied that the
association of persons was guilty
of any of the acts specified in
section 18 or section 18a, he may
impose or direct the imposition of
a penalty in accordance with the
provisions of the said sections.
(4) Every person who was at the
time of such discontinuance or
dissolution a member of the
association of persons, and the
legal representative of any such
person who is deceased, shall be
jointly and severally liable for he
amount of tax, penalty or other sum
payable, and all the provisions of
this Act, so far as may be, shall
apply to any such assessment or
imposition of penalty or other sum.
(5) Where such discontinuance or
dissolution takes place after any
proceedings in respect of an
assessment year have commenced, the
proceedings may be continued
against the persons referred to in
sub-section (4) from the stage at
which the proceedings stood at the
time of such discontinuance or
dissolution, and all the provisions
of this Act shall, so far as may
be, apply accordingly."
It will be seen that assessment as an association of
persons can be made only when the individual shares of
members of the association in the income or assets or both
of the association on the date of its formation or any time
thereafter are indeterminate or unknown. It is only in such
an eventually that an assessment can be made on an
association of persons, otherwise not. Sub-section (2) of
Section 21AA deals with cases of such associations as
mentioned in sub-section (1). That means only association of
persons in which individual shares of the members were
unknown or indeterminate can be subjected to wealth tax.
Sub-section (3) also deals with association of persons
referred to in sub-section (1). Sub-sections (4) and (5)
deal with some consequences which will follow the members of
an association of persons spoken of in sub-section (1) in
the case of discontinuance of dissolution.
It is not the case of the Revenue before us that the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 12
members of the club were unknown or that their interest in
the assets of the club was indeterminate. In fact, or
argument was advanced on this aspect of the matter in any of
the cases that have come for hearing along with this case.
In fact, a list of members of the club should be readily
available. In any event, there is no finding of fact that
particulars of members were unknown or their interest in the
assets of the club were indeterminate.
In our view, Section 21AA far from helping the case of
the Revenue directly goes against its contention. An
association of persons cannot be taxed at all under Section
3 of the Act. That is why an amendment was necessary to be
made by the Finance Act, 1981 whereby Section 21AA was
inserted to bring to tax net wealth of an association of
persons where individual shares of the members of the
association were unknown or indeterminate.
We were referred to a large number of cases. It is not
necessary to deal with them in detail. It may be noted that
the Gujarat High Court in the case of Orient Club v. Wealth
Tax Officer, 123 ITR 395 and the Bombay High Court in the
case of Orient Club v. Commissioner of Wealth Tax, 136 ITR
697 were of the view that the charging provisions of the
Wealth Tax had not treated a firm or an association of
persons as a taxable unit. An unincorporated members’ club
was a society of persons and did not have any existence
apart from the members of which it was composed. An
unincorporated club being an association of persons could
not be brought to tax as an individual under the Wealth Tax
Act. The Kerala High Court in the case of Commissioner of
Wealth Tax v. Mulam Club, 191 ITR 370 has taken a similar
view.
A contrary view was taken by the Madras High Court in
the case of Coimbatore Club v. Wealth Tax Officer, 153 ITR
172 where it was held that the expression "individual"
occurring in Section 3 of the Act was wide enough to include
within its scope a plurality of individuals forming a single
collective unit even though formed without any profit
motive.
In our judgment, the Kerala High Court in the case of
Commissioner of Wealth Tax v. Mulam Club (supra), the Bombay
High Court in the case of Orient club v. Commissioner of
Wealth Tax (supra) and the Gujarat High Court in the case of
Orient Club v. Wealth Tax Officer (supra) have come to a
right decision. The judgment of the Madras High Court in the
case of Coimbatore Club (supra) to the contrary is
erroneous. The Madras High Court has overlooked the
significance of omission of firms or association of persons
or a body of individuals from the charging section even
though these entities were specifically made taxable under
various direct tax enactments from 1922 to 1961. Moreover,
the Wealth Tax Assessment of an individual will involve
computation of "net wealth". All the assets belonging to an
individual will have to be included. If an individual is a
partner of a firm or member of an Association of persons,
the value of his share in these entities will have to be
included in his individual assessment. We have already
examined the scheme of the Wealth Tax Act and also the
object behind the insertion of Section 21AA. All these will
go to show, the legislature deliberately excluded a firm or
an association of persons from the charge of wealth tax and
the word "individual" in the charging section cannot be
stretched to include entities which had been deliberately
left out of the charge.
Strong reliance was placed on the judgment of this
Court in Wealth Tax Officer, Calicut vs. C.M.Mammed Kayi 129
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 12
ITR 307. In that case, the question was whether Mapilla
Marumkkathayam tarwards of North Malabar - Muslim undivided
families governed by their Marumkkathayam Act (Madras Act 17
of 1939) - fell within the expression "individual" and were
assessable to tax under section 3 of the Wealth Tax Act,
1957.
The contention in that case was about the
constitutionality of the charging Section of the Wealth Tax
Act. The challenge was on two grounds; (a) that Parliament
was not competent to include an Hindu Undivided Family in
the charging Section 3 of the Act in view of Entry 86, List
I of the Seventh Schedule of the Constitution and (b) that
the charge of wealth tax on an Hindu Undivided Family Under
Section 3 of the Act was violative of Article 14 of the
Constitution. Entry 86 in List I of the Seventh Schedule of
the Constitution is "Taxes on the capital value of the
assets, exclusive of agricultural land, of individuals and
companies; taxes on the capital of companies". The High
Court rejected the challenge on the first ground and held
that Parliament was competent to include an Hindu Undivided
Family in Section 3 of the Act as constituting a body or
group of individuals coming within the term "individuals" in
entry 86. However, the challenge on the ground of Article 14
was upheld. The High Court was of the view that there was
discrimination as between an Hindu Undivided Family and
Muslim Mapilla Tarwards which were also undivided families
and, therefore, the charging section so far as it governed
undivided families was hit by Article 14. The Department
came up in appeal before this Court and by a judgment dated
February 17, 1964, this Court set aside the judgment and
order of the High Court and remanded the case back to the
High Court to consider whether Article 14 applied to the
case or not after giving the parties further opportunity to
put forward their cases supported by facts and figures.
On remand, out of the two contentions initially
advanced by the assessee, the first relating to the
constitutionality of the Act in relation to Entry 86, List I
had become academic because the point was dealt with and
overruled by this Court in the case of Banarsi Das v. Wealth
Tax Officer, 56 ITR 224 (S.C). Therefore, only the second
contention regarding validity of the charge imposed by
Section 3 survived. A Special Bench of three Judges
ultimately rejected the challenge and held that Section 3
was not violative of Article 14. But the three judges, by
different reasonings held that non-HUFs like Mapilla
Tarwards fell altogether outside the scope of the charge of
Section 3. The Revenue once again came up in appeal to this
Court. The Court drew distinction between canons of
construction applicable to entries in the legislative lists
and canons of construction applicable to construction of a
charging section in a taxing statute. It was explained:
"It cannot be disputed that the
canon of construction applicable to
entries in the three Legislative
Lists occurring in a Constitution
would be different from the canon
of construction that would apply to
terms or expressions used in a
taxing statute. The object of an
entry in any legislative field as
possible by the use of compendious
words or expressions while the rule
of construction applicable to a
taxing statute must ensure hat "the
subject is not to be taxed unless
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 12
the language of the statute clearly
imposes the obligation" [per Lord
Simonds in Russel v. Scott (1948)
AC 422 (HL)."
The Court further held that the point in controversy
has to be examined having regard to the general scheme of
the Wealth Tax Act which was to assess all persons who had
wealth beyond the statutory limit. The presumption would be
equality of incidence rather than exemption of a few.
Secondly, it was observed that the term "individual" can be
read in plural and as such would include a body or group of
individuals like a Mapilla Tarwad. Thirdly, there was no
warrant for suggesting that the two terms of "individuals"
and "Hindu Undivided Family" had been used in antithesis
with each other. Section 3 being the charging provisions was
merely concerned with specifying different assessing units
for the purpose of assessment of wealth. There could be no
dispute that the Legislature was competent to select
persons, properties, transactions and objects for the
imposition of a levy and for that purpose classify as many
different assessing units as it could reasonably think
necessary and that is how the three assessing units
"individual" "Hindu Undivided Family" and "Company" (which
was later omitted) came to be specified in Section 3. The
Court concluded:
"In our view, the specific mention
of an HUF in the section does not
result in the exclusion of group of
individuals who only form a unit by
reason of their birth like a
Mapilla tarward from the operation
of the section. It is difficult to
accept the argument that if the
term "individual" was intended to
include joint families or undivided
families it was redundant to
specify HUFs."
The Court thereafter pointed out that this conclusion
accorded with legislative history of the taxing statues in
the country. Mapilla Tarwards have been consistently treated
and taxed in the status of "individuals" under various
taxing statutes. Reference was made to the Expenditure Tax
Act, 1957 under which a similar question was considered by
this Court in the case of V. Venugopala Ravi Varma Rajah v.
union of India, 74 ITR 49 (SC). In that case, the question
was whether a Mapilla Tarwad in North Malabar had to be
treated as Hindu undivided family for the purpose of levy of
expenditure tax. Expenditure tax was levied in respect of
"expenditure incurred by any individual or Hindu undivided
family in the previous year" (Section 3 of the Expenditure
Tax Act). It was held by this Court that Mapilla Tarwad
could not be assessed to tax in the status of Hindu
undivided family. However, it was liable to pay tax as an
individual. It was pointed out:
"Under the taxing Acts the scheme
of treating Hindu undivided family
as a distinct taxable entity has
been adopted for a long time, e.g.,
the Indian Income-tax Act, 1869 (IX
of 1869), the Indian Income-tax
Act, 1870 (IX of 1870), the Indian
Income-Tax Act, 1871 (XII of 1871),
Act No. VIII of 1872, Act No. II of
1886, Act No. VII of 1912, Act No.
XI of 1922, Act No.43 of 1961, have
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 12
treated a Hindu undivided family as
a distinct taxable entity.
Similarly, under the Wealth-tax
Act, 1957 (27 of 1957), and the
Gift-tax Act, 1958 (18 of 1958),
the Hindu undivided family is made
a unit of taxation. Under the
Business Profits Tax Act, 1947 (21
of 1947), and the Excess Profits
Tax Act, 1940, also the Hindu
undivided family was made a unit of
taxation. For the purposes of these
Acts Mapilla tarwards governed by
the Marumakkathayam law have been
regarded as individuals."
(Emphasis supplied)
On the basis of the reasoning given in the case of
Venugopala (supra), this Court had no difficulty in holding
that having regard to the legislative history of revenue
laws, Mapilla Tarward had to be assessed to tax as an
"individual".
The Court laid special emphasis on the aforesaid
passage in the judgment of Venugopala’s case, and reiterated
that for the purpose of various tax laws set out in that
passage "Mapilla tarwards governed by the Marumakkathayam
law have been regarded as individuals".
This judgment took note of the fact that long before
the Wealth Tax Act was passed Mapilla Tarwad families had
been treated as distinct taxable entities and had been taxed
as individuals under various tax laws for a very long time.
Therefore, "individual" in Section 3 of the Wealth Tax Act
must be given the same meaning as was given in various other
tax laws so as to include a Mapilla Tarward family .
This judgment really goes against the contention made
on behalf of the Revenue. The Court first laid down that a
charging section of a taxing statute has to be strictly
construed. The Court found that the charging section of
various taxing statutes had imposed tax on Hindu Undivided
Families as well as on "individuals". It has been held under
various fiscal statues that Mapilla Tarwads cannot be taxed
as a Hindu undivided family but will have to be taxed as an
"individual". If "individual" is understood under the Wealth
Tax Act, in the same sense in which it has been understood
in various fiscal statutes, then "individual" under Section
3 of the Wealth Tax Act will include a Mapilla Tarwad. But
in the various tax Acts mentioned in that judgment
‘individual’ has not been interpreted to include a firm or
an association of persons.
That the charging section of the Wealth Tax Act does
not impose a charge on a firm or association of persons has
been made clear by explanatory notes on the provisions
relating to direct taxes issued by the Central Board of
Direct Taxes on June 29, 1981 clarifying the Finance Bill,
1981. The idea behind introduction of the new Section 21AA
was explained in the following words:
"21.1 Under the Wealth-tax Act,
1957, individuals and Hindu
undivided families are taxable
entities but an association of
persons is not charged to wealth-
tax on its net wealth. Where an
individual or a Hindu undivided
family is a member of an
association of persons, the value
of the interest of such member in
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 12
the association of persons is
determined in accordance with the
provisions of the rules and is
includible in the net wealth of the
member.
21.2 Instances had come to the
notice of the Government where
certain assessees had resorted to
the creation of a large number of
associations of persons without
specifically defining the shares of
the members therein with a view to
avoiding proper tax liability.
Under the existing provisions, only
the value of the interest of the
member in the association which is
ascertainable is includible in his
net wealth. Accordingly, to the
extent the value of the interest of
the member in the association
cannot be ascertained or is
unknown, no wealth-tax is payable
by such member in respect thereof.
21.3 In order to counter such
attempts at tax avoidance through
the medium of multiple associations
of persons without defining the
shares of the members, the Finance
Act has inserted a new Section 21AA
in the Wealth-tax Act to provide
for assessment in the case of
associations of persons which do
not define the shares of the
members in the assets thereof. Sub-
section (1) provides that where
assets chargeable to wealth-tax are
held by an association of persons
(other than a company or a co-
operative society) and the
individual shares of the members of
the said association is income or
the assets of the association on
the date of its formation or at any
time thereafter, are indeterminate
or unknown, wealth-tax will be
levied upon and recovered from
such association in the like manner
and to the same extent as it is
leviable who is a citizen of India
and is resident in India at the
rates specified in Part I of
Schedule I or at the rate of 3 per
cent, whichever course is more
beneficial to the revenue."
It will appear from this notification that the Central
Board of Direct Taxes clearly recognised that the charge of
wealth tax was on individuals and Hindu undivided families
and not on any other body of individuals or association of
persons. Section 21AA has been introduced to prevent evasion
of tax. In a normal case, in assessment of an individual,
his wealth from every source will be added up and computed
in accordance with provisions of the Wealth Tax Act to
arrive at the net-wealth which has to be taxed. So, if an
individual has any interest in a firm or any other non-
corporate body, then his interest in those bodies or
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 12
associations will be added up in his wealth. it is only
where such addition is not possible because the shares of
the individual in a body holding property is unknown or
indeterminate, resort will be taken to Section 21AA and
association of individuals will be taxed as association of
persons.
In the instant case, we are concerned with assessment
years 1970-71 to 1977-78. Section 21AA was not in force
during the relevant assessment period. There was no way that
a club could be assessed as an association of persons in
these assessment years. It is not even the case of the
Revenue that individual member’s interest in the club was
indeterminate or unknown.
In view of the aforesaid, the appeal must fail. The
question referred by the tribunal was correctly answered by
the High Court in the affirmative and in favour of the
assesee. The appeal is dismissed. There will be no order as
to costs.
C.A. Nos. 3210-14/88, 1544/93, 1649/93, 5340/48/93, 5393/94,
948/95, 8347/95, 1796-1799/96, SLP (C) No. 2490/84, C.A.Nos.
2517/96, 9096/96, SLP (C) Nos. 7246-7250/97, C.A.Nos. 2366-
2375/94, SLP (C) Nos. 16259-16275/94 with C.A. No.658/93
In view of our decision in C.A. No.650 of 1988, the
above appeals and Special Leave Petitions are also dismissed
with no order as to costs.
C.A.Nos.467/95, C.A.Nos.3532-38/1988 & C.A.Nos. 7420-22 of 1997
arising out of S.L.P. Nos. 4658-60/1990
Leave granted.
The appeals are allowed.