Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BHAGWAN DAS SITA RAM
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX
DATE OF JUDGMENT05/03/1984
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
CITATION:
1984 AIR 993 1984 SCR (3) 100
1984 SCALE (1)492
ACT:
Income-tax Act, 1922-s. 22 and s. 23 read with second
proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 34-Interpretation of-When
assessment can be made after a period of four years from
assessment year-Assessment proceedings commence by filing of
voluntary return-On expiry of four years proceedings are
suspended but proceedings and returns do not become invalid.
Bar of limitation lifts in case of direction by Tribunal-
When and on whom Tribunal can issue direction.
Words and Phrases-"any person" in second proviso to
sub-s. (3) of s. 34-Scope of must be a Person who would be
liable to be assessed for whole or part of income that went
into assessment of the year under appeal.
HEADNOTE:
A bigger Hindu undivided family (HUF) had filed income-
tax returns for the assessment years 1946-47 to 1949-50.
When the assessment was being done the bigger (HUF) made a
claim under s. 25A of the Income Tax Act, 1922, that the
said HUF was partitioned on 19.5.1945. While this claim was
pending, the appellant along with a smaller HUF (hereinafter
referred to as the assessee) which had come into being on
partition of the bigger HUF, filed voluntary returns on
18.11.1950 for the assessment years 1946-47 to 1949-50 under
s.22(1) of the Act. The bigger HUF’s claim partition, which
was rejected by the Income Tax Officer and the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner, was accepted by the Appellate
Tribunal on 31.8.1954. While disposing of the appeals of the
bigger HUF against the assessment orders, the Tribunal gave
a direction on 28.10.1954 that assessments be made on the
bigger HUF after accepting partition. After the claim of
partition was accepted the Income-tax Officer sent notices
to the assessee for initiating proceedings against him under
s.34(1) (b). In response to the notices the assessee filed
fresh returns on 12.4.1955. Rejecting the contention of the
assessee that the time for making assessment under s.34 had
expired, the Income-tax Officer completed assessments under
s. 23(3) read with s. 34 on . 8.9.1955. The assessee’s
appeal was rejected by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner
and the Appellate Tribunal. The assessee filed a writ
petition in the High Court which was allowed and the
assessment orders were quashed on 30.3.1960. The High Court
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observed that as voluntary returns filed by the assessee
were pending no proceeding could be taken under s. 34.
Thereafter the Revenue attempted to assess the assessee on
the basis of voluntary returns originally filed on
18.11.1950 by relying upon the order of the Tribunal dated
23.10.1954 in the bigger HUF’s case and invoking second
proviso to s. 34(3). The assessee filed a writ petition and
that was dismissed. The Income-tax Officer completed
assessment under s. 23(3) on 31.5.1962. In appeal the
Appellate Assistant Commis-
101
sioner held that no valid assessment could be made on
31.5.1962 and this view was confirmed by the Appellate
Tribunal. A reference was made to the High Court on the
question whether on the facts and circumstances of the case,
valid assessment could be made on 31.5.1962 for the
assessment years 1948-49 and 1949 50 on the basis of
voluntary returns of income filed under s. 22(1) of the Act.
The assessee contended that since a return exhausted itself
after expiry of four years from the end of the assessment
year to which it related, no assessment could be made on the
basis of voluntary return, it could be done under s. 34 only
if 2nd proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 34 applied. By majority a
full Bench of the High Court answered the question in the
affirmative in favour of the revenue. Hence these appeals.
The two questions which arose were: (1) whether the
assessment could be made under s. 23(3) on the basis of
voluntary returns filed or action should have been taken
under s. 34 with the help of the second proviso to sub-s.
(3) of s. 34; and (2) whether the Tribunal could give a
finding or direction in respect of the assessee.
Dismissing the appeals,
^
HELD :
On Question No. (1)
The High Court was right in taking the view that
assessments could be made on the basis of voluntary returns
already filed by the assessee. Sub-s. (3) of s. 34 provides
a period of limitation of four years for assessment under s.
23 of the Act. If the assessment proceedings commence by
filing of voluntary returns, as indeed these do, on the
expiry of the period of four years from the end of the year
in which the income, profits or gains were first assessable,
such proceedings are suspended or interrupted. But neither
the proceedings nor the returns become invalid. Since the
order was passed by the Tribunal giving direction, the bar
of limitation provided by s. 34(3) was lifted and the
assessments could be made without any bar of limitation.
[106 G-H, 107 A]
Commissioner of Income-tax Bombay City II v.
Ranchhoddass Karsondas, 36 I.T.R. 569; Estate of the late
A.M.K.M. Karuppan Chettiar v. Commissioner of Income-tax,
Madras, 72 I.T.R. 403; and Commissioner of Income-tax Madras
v. M.K.K.R. Muthukaruppan Chettiar, 78 I.T.R. 69, referred
to
On question No. (2)
The High Court rightly answered the question in favour
of the revenue on the view that the Tribunal was competent
to give the direction in respect of the present assessee.
[108 E-G]
Second proviso to s. 34(3) authorises directions to be
given by the Tribunal in respect of the assessee or any
person beyond four years as provided in s. 34(3) of the Act.
As explained in Income-tax Officer v. Murlidhar Bhagwandas,
"any person" in respect of whom such direction could be
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given must be one who would be liable to be assessed for the
whole or a part of the income that went into the assessment
of the year under appeal or revision. The court must turn
102
to s. 31 of the Act to ascertain who is that person other
than the appealing assessee who might be affected by the
orders passed by the appellate authority. Modification or
setting aside of assessment made on a firm, joint Hindu
family, association of persons for a particular year may
affect the assessment for the said year on a partner or
partners of the firm, member of members of such Hindu
undivided family or the individual, as the case might be.
These instances are only illustrative and not exhaustive.
The expression "any person" in its widest amplitude might
take in any person connected or not with the assessee, whose
income for any year had escaped assessment; but this
construction cannot be accepted, for the said expression was
necessarily circumscribed by the scope of the subject-matter
of the appeal or revision, as the case might be. So
therefore the person must be one who would be liable to be
assessed for the whole or any part of the income that went
into assessment of the year under appeal or revision
(Emphasis supplied). Therefore, "any person" in sub-section
(3) of s. 34 must be confined to person intimately connected
in the aforesaid sense with the assessments of the years
under appeal. [701 C-S, 108 A-F]
Income-tax Officer, A-Ward, Sitapur v. Murlidhar
Bhagwan Das, 52 I.T.R. 335; Rajinder Nath v. Commissioner of
Income-tax, Delhi, 120 I.T.R. 14; Commissioner of Income-
tax, Central, Calcutta v. National Taj Traders, 121 I.T.R.
535; and Commissioner of Income-tax, Andhra Pradesh v. Vadde
Pullaiah & Co., 89 I.T.R. 240, referred to.
The facts in the instant case show that income can
belong either to the bigger Hindu undivided family or to the
smaller Hindu undivided family, the present assessee
alongwith another smaller H.U.F. and to no one else.
Therefore a finding that it belongs or it does not belong to
the bigger Hindu undivided family which had disrupted on
partition would determine the issue whether it could be
taxed in the hands of the present assessee. Judged in the
light of the test laid down in Murlidhar Bhagwan Das case
and as pointed out in Rajinder Nath’s case, it appears that
the present assessee can be said to be a person who would be
liable to be assessed for the whole or part of the income
that went to the assessment of the bigger Hindu undivided
family in years under appeal and is a person intimately
connected with the assessments of the bigger Hindu undivided
family. The income in this case cannot be the income of both
bigger Hindu undivided family and the present assessee, it
must be either of these two. Therefore, the directions given
in the appeals filed by the bigger Hindu undivided family
would be applicable to the present assessee. [111 A-D]
Commissioner of Income-tax, Gujarat v. Shantilal
Punjabhai, 57 I.T.R. 58, distinguished.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Punjab, Jammu & Kashmir and
Himachal Pradesh v. S. Raghubir Singh Trust, 123 I.T.R. 438
referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 1168-69
(NT) of 1973.
Appeal by Special leave from the Judgment and Order
dated
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103
the 3rd January, 1973 of the Allahabad High Court in I. T.
Ref. No. 450 of 1969.
S.C. Manchanda and M. J.P. Malhotra for the Appellant.
S.T. Desai, B.B. Ahuja and Miss A. Subhashini for the
Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SABYASACHI MUKHARJI, J. These appeals by certificate
granted by the High Court of Allahabad under Section 66A(2)
of the Indian Income-Tax Act, 1922, arise out of judgment
delivered and order passed on 3rd January, 1973 by the High
Court of Allahabad in Income-tax Reference No. 450 of 1965.
The following question of law had been referred to the High
Court for consideration under Section 66(1) of the Income-
Tax Act, 1922 by the Appellate Tribunal, Allahabad Bench,
Allahabad:
"Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of
the case, valid assessments could be made on 31st May,
1962, for the assessment years 1948-49 and 1949-50 on
the basis of voluntary returns of income filed under
Section 22(1) of the Indian Income-Tax Act, 1922 on
18.11.1950?
The matter came up before a Division Bench of the High
Court and as there was a previous bench decision of that
Court in the case of Sool Chand Ram Sewak v. Commissioner of
Income-tax, U.P. which supported the revenue’s case and as
the division bench before whom this case came was unable to
accept that view, the division bench referred the case to a
larger Bench. This reference thereafter came before a Full
Bench consisting of Gulati, H. N. Seth & C.S.P. Singh, JJ.
Gulati and C. S. P. Singh, JJ. answered the question in the
affirmative in favour of the revenue and against the
assessee. Seth J. however, was in favour of assessee. In
view of the majority the question was answered in favour of
the revenue and in affirmative.
104
Before we deal with the question in controversy, it
will be necessary to note some of the relevant facts. There
were originally four appeals for the assessment years 1946-
47, 1947-48, 1948-49 and 1949-50. As the appeals for the
assessment years 1946-47 and 1947-48 were withdrawn by the
revenue, we are now concerned with appeals for the
assessment years 1948-49 and 1949-50.
The present assessee is a branch of a bigger Hindu
undivided family known as Nathu Ram Jawahar Lal, Jhansi.
The bigger Hindu undivided family of M/s Nathu Ram
Jawahar Lal was partitioned on 19th May, 1945, and the
present assessee along with another smaller H.U.F. came into
existence and the said bigger H.U.F. had made a claim in
respect of the partition under Section 25A of the Indian
Income-Tax Act, 1922. While this claim was pending the
present assessee filed voluntary returns under Section 22(1)
of the Act for the assessment years 1946-47 to 1949-50 on
10th November, 1950. The said claim of partition by the
bigger H.U.F. was rejected by the Income-tax Officer and
also by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner. The said
H.U.F. thereafter, filed appeals to the Appellate Tribunal
in respect of the order under claim of partition under
Section 25A of 1922 Act which by its order dated 31st
August, 1954 accepted the claim under Section 25A of 1922
Act, and the Tribunal passed orders on that basis in the
appeals relating to the assessment orders in respect of the
bigger H.U.F. on 28th October, 1954. The Income-tax Officer,
thereafter, initiated proceedings under Section 34 of the
Income-tax Act of 1922 for assessing the smaller Hindu
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undivided family, the present assessee in view of the fact
that the claim for disruption of the bigger H. U. F. had
been accepted by the Tribunal. The present assessee filed
fresh returns of income on 12.4.1955 in response to notices
under Section 34 of 1922 Act. The returns originally filed
were under Section 22(1) and were filed on 18th November,
1950. The assessee’s objection regarding the validity of the
assessments being made under Section 34 on merits as well as
on the point that time for making the assessment under
Section 34 had already expired, were rejected by the Income-
tax Officer. He, therefore, completed the assessments on
8.9.1955 under Section 23(3) read with Section 34 of the
Income-tax Act, 1922. The assessee could not get any
decision in his favour either from the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner or from the Tribunal and being aggrieved by
these orders, filed a Writ Petition to the High Court of
Allahabad challenging the validity of the Appellate
105
orders. The assessee was successful in the Writ and,
therefore, the appellate orders were quashed by the High
Court. The revenue having failed in its attempt to complete
the assessee’s assessments under Section 34, made another
attempt to assess the assessee on the basis of the voluntary
returns originally filed by the assessee on 18.11.1950 by
relying upon the order of the Tribunal dated 28.10.1954 and
invoking the provisions of 2nd proviso to Section 34(3). The
said assessments which were completed on 31st May, 1962 were
the subject matters of appeals before the Tribunal.
The point before the Tribunal was whether valid
assessments could be made for the assessment years under
consideration on 31st May, 1962 on the basis of the returns
filed under Section 22(1) of the Act of 1922 on 18th
November, 1950. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner by his
order held that no valid assessments could be made on 31st
May, 1962.
It appears that on 28th October, 1950, relating to the
assessment years 1946-47 to 1949-50 in case of bigger Hindu
undivided family, M/s Nathu Ram Jawaharlal, Jhansi, order
was passed by the Tribunal in the appeal relating to the
assessments pending before it. It should be noted that
originally on the basis that the bigger H.U.F. had not been
disrupted assessments for these years had been made and
appeals relating to those assessments were pending before
the Tribunal. The Tribunal disposed of these appeals by the
order dated 28th October, 1954 and the Tribunal in the said
order had observed, inter alia, as follows;
"The assessments for those years were (have)
necessarily to be set aside with the direction that
fresh assessments should be made, one for the period
19.5.1945 upto which the Hindu undivided family was in
existence and the others on the component Hindu
undivided families, namely M/s Jawaharlal Mani Ram and
Bhagwan Das Sita Ram."
The Tribunal in the instant appeal out of which the
reference was made to the High Court and out of which these
appeals arise, after discussing the relevant facts and the
provisions of law confirmed the order of the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner and dismissed the appeals. As
mentioned hereinbefore after the Tribunal had directed the
assessments should be made on the component units of the
bigger Hindu undivided family, after partition was accepted,
namely, the assessee and Jawaharlal Mani Ram, the Income-tax
Officer instead
106
of proceeding on the basis of the voluntary returns already
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filed by the assessee proceeded to take action under Section
34(1) (b) of the Act of 1922 and completed the assessments
for all the four years on September 8,1955. The assessee
appealed against these assessments to the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner of Income-tax, but before the appeals
were taken up for hearing, the assessee moved the High Court
of Allahabad under Article 226 of the Constitution. On March
30, 1960, the High Court quashed the assessment orders on
the ground that as voluntary returns filed by the assessee
were pending, no proceeding could be taken under Section 34
of the Act, 1922. Thereafter the Income-tax Officer
initiated proceedings on the basis of the voluntary returns.
The assessee again filed a writ petition praying for
quashing the proceedings on the ground that revenue could
not proceed against it on the basis of the voluntary
returns. This petition was rejected by the High Court and
thereafter the Income-tax Officer proceeded to complete the
assessments under Section 23(3) and passed assessment orders
on 31st May, 1962, in respect of the four years.
The first question, is, whether the assessment could be
made under Section 23(3) on the basis of voluntary returns
filed or action should have been taken under Section 34 with
the help of the second proviso to sub-section (3) of Section
34. It is well-settled that when a return of income is filed
by the assessee voluntarily under Section 22(1) of the Act,
1922, assessment proceedings commence against him and
Section 34 does not come into play at all so long as the
assessment proceedings remain pending. But it was contended
that a return exhausted itself after the expiry of four
years from the end of the assessment year to which it
related. After the expiry of that period, no assessment was
possible on the basis of the voluntary return. In such a
case assessment was possible under Section 34, if the case
was covered by the second proviso to Section 34(3).
The High Court was of the opinion that sub-section (3)
of Section 34 provides a period of limitation of four years
for assessment under Section 23 of the Act, 1922. If the
assessment proceedings commence by filing of voluntary
return, as indeed these do, on the expiry of the period of
four years from the end of the year in which the income,
profits or gains were first assessable, such proceedings are
suspended or interrupted. But neither the proceedings nor
the returns become invalid. The High Court referred to the
provisions of Section 34(3) and was of the view that since
the order was passed by the Tribunal giving direction, the
bar or limitation was lifted and
107
the assessments could be made without any bar or limitation.
Reference was made to the decision of this Court in the case
of Commissioner of Income-tax Bombay City II v. Ranchhoddass
Karsondas, and in the case of Estate of the late A.M.K.M.
Karuppan Chettiar v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras and
Commissioner of Income-tax Madras v. M.K.K.R. Muthukaruppan
Chettiar.
The High Court, on the basis of these decisions, was of
the view that assessments could be made on the basis of
voluntary returns already filed by the assessee. We are of
the opinion that the High Court was right.
The next question is whether it was open to the
Tribunal to give a finding or direction in respect of the
present assessee. Reliance was placed on the decision of
this Court in Income-tax Officer, A-Ward, Sitapur v.
Murlidhar Bhagwan Das. There, this court after referring to
the expression "any person" in the 2nd proviso of sub-
section (3) of Section 34 of 1922 Act observed at page 346
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of the report as follows.
"The expression "any person" in its widest
connotation may take in any person, whether connected
or not with the assessee, whose income for any year has
escaped assessment; but this construction cannot be
accepted, for the said expression is necessarily
circumscribed by the scope of the subject-matter of the
appeal or revision, as the case may be. That is to say,
that person must be one who would be liable to be
assessed for the whole or a part of the income that
went into the assessment of the year under appeal or
revision. If so construed, we must turn to section 31
to ascertain who is that person other than the
appealing assessee who can be liable to be assessed for
the income of the said assessment year. A combined
reading of section 30(1) and Section 31(3) of the Act
indicates the cases where persons other than the
appealing assessees might be affected by orders passed
by the Appellate Commissioner. Modification or setting
aside of assessment made on a firm, joint Hindu family,
association
108
of persons, for a particular year may affect the
assessment for the said year on a partner or partners
of the firm, member or members of the Hindu undivided
family or the individual, as the case may be. In such
cases though the latter are not co-nomine parties to
the appeal, their assessments depend upon the
assessments on the former. The said instances are only
illustrative. It is not necessary to pursue the matter
further. We would, therefore, hold that the expression
"any person" in the setting in which it appears must be
confined to a person intimately connected in the
aforesaid sense with the assessments of the year under
appeal."
The High Court was of the view that "any person" would
include the person who would be liable to be assessed for
the whole or a part of the income that went into the
assessment of the year under appeal or revision. In that
view of the matter, the majority judgment of the High Court
on this aspect was in favour of the revenue. Then on the
question whether the direction for the assessment could be
given in respect of any other year, other than the year in
which the partition took place, it was contended that
direction could be given only for the assessment year 1946-
47. Majority judgment of the High Court found no force in
that contention. As this question arose directly for the
assessment years 1948-49 and 1949-50 in respect of which the
appeals came before the Tribunal in which the directions had
been given, the High Court was of the view that it was
necessary for the Tribunal to give a finding with regard to
the partition of the family and the ownership of the income
in both the appeals. The Tribunal was thus competent to give
the direction. In that view of the matter, the two learned
judges of the Allahabad High Court were of the opinion that
assessments were valid and answered the question in favour
of the revenue. Referring to the said decision which has
been mentioned in the majority judgment, Seth J. however was
of the view that the direction given by the Tribunal in this
case did not authorise the assessment on the smaller Hindu
undivided family. Seth J. was further of the view that such
direction could only have been given in the year in which
disruption of the bigger H.U.F. took place. In that view of
the matter, Seth J. expressed dissent as mentioned
hereinbefore. We are of the opinion that the majority of the
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learned judges of the High Court were right. Second proviso
to Section 34(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922
authorised directions to be given by the Tribunal in respect
of the assessee or any person beyond four years as provided
in Section 34(3) of 1922 Act.
109
As noted before the expression "any person" in respect
of whom such direction could be given was explained by this
Court in Income-tax Officer, A-Ward Sitapur v. Murlidhar
Bhagwandas (supra). As mentioned in the passage quoted above
from the said decision, if so construed then the Court must
turn to Section 31 of 1922 Act to a certain who is that
person other than the appealing assessees might be affected
by the orders passed by the appellate authority.
Modification or setting aside of assessment made on a firm,
joint Hindu family, association of persons, for a particular
year may affect the assessment for the said year on a
partner or partners of the firm, member or members of such
Hindu undivided family or the individual, as the case might
be. It was therefore argued that it was only those types of
assessees mentioned by this Court in the passage noted above
were the ’persons’ who could be "any person" other than the
appealing assessee who can be said to be liable to be
assessed and in respect of whom direction might be given,
otherwise such directions or provision for such directions
if the provision is so read would be ultra vires article 14
of the Constitution. We must make it clear that this Court
had itself made it clear categorically in the passage quoted
above that the instances given in the above passage were
only illustrative passage meaning thereby that the instances
were not exhaustive. This Court made it clear that the
expression "any person" in its widest amplitude might take
in any person connected or not with the assessee, whose
income for any year had escaped assessment; but this
construction could not be accepted, for the said expression
was necessarily circumscribed by the scope of the subject-
matter of the appeal or revision, as the case might be. So
therefore the person must be one who would be liable to be
assessed for the whole or any part of the income that went
into assessment of the year under appeal or revision
(Emphasis supplied). Therefore, this Court observed that
"any person" in sub-section (3) of Section 34 must be
confined to a person intimately connected in the aforesaid
sense with the assessments of the years under appeal.
Reference may be made to the decision of this Court in
the case of Rajinder Nath v. Commissioner of Income-tax,
Delhi, where the I.T.O. treated two buildings as belonging
to a firm comprised of a father and his two major sons as
partners and in the assessments on the firm for the
assessment years 1955-56 and 1956-57 and he estimated the
cost of construction of the buildings at a higher figure
than that
110
disclosed and brought to tax the excess as income in the
hands of the firm. On appeal, the A.A.C. found that the
money advanced for the construction of the buildings had
been debited in equal shares to the father and two major
sons and a minor son and held that the firm was not the
owner of the properties and delected the addition. The
A.A.C. also observed that the I.T.O. was free to take action
to assess the excess in the hands of the co-owners. The
I.T.O. thereupon issued notices under Section 147(a) of the
I.T. Act, 1961 and reopened the assessments of the
individual assessees (the co-owners) and included therein
the proportionate shares of the additions on account of the
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estimated excess of the cost of construction. On appeal, the
A.A.C. held that Section 147(a) could not apply but upheld
the assessments under Section 153(3) (ii) of 1961 Act. On
further appeal, the Tribunal held that Section 153(3) (ii)
could not apply because there was neither a finding nor a
direction in the earlier order of the A.A.C. and further
that A.A.C. could not convert the assessments made under
Section 147(a) into those under Section 153(3) (ii). On a
reference of the questions, (i) whether the A.A.C. was
justified in holding that the provisions of Section 147(a)
were not applicable, and (ii) whether the provisions of
Section 153 (3) (ii) were not applicable, the High Court
held that the provisions of Section 153(3) were applicable
observing that the A.A.C’s finding that the properties did
not belong to the firm and, therefore, the excess amount of
the cost of construction could not be regarded as the income
of the firm was a finding which was necessary for the
disposal of the firm’s appeal and as a corollary it was held
that the buildings belonged to the co-owners and this
necessitated the "direction" to the I.T.O. that he was free
to assess the excess in the hands of the co-owners. Dealing
with this contention, Pathak J. who delivered the judgment
of this Court observed at page 20 of the report:
"The expression "another person" in the Expln.
would include persons intimately connected with the
person in whose case the order is made in the sense
explained by this Court in Murlidhar Bhagwan Das (1964)
52 ITR 335 (SC). It is one thing for the partners of a
firm to be required to explain the source of a receipt
by the firm, it is quite another for them in their
individual status to be asked to explain the source of
amounts received by them as separate individuals. On
such opportunity being provided it would have been open
to the assessees to show that the excess alleged over
the disclosed cost of construction did not constitute
any taxable income. The finding contemplated in Expln.
3, it will be
111
noted, is a finding that the amount represents the
income of another person."
In the instant case before us, applying the test
observed in that case this was a case where the facts showed
that income can belong either to the bigger Hindu undivided
family or to the smaller Hindu undivided family, the present
assessee along with another smaller H.U.F. and to no one
else. Therefore a finding that it belongs or it does not
belong to the bigger Hindu undivided family which had
disrupted on partition would determine the issue whether it
could be taxed in the hands of the present assessee. Judged
in the light of the test laid down in Murlidhar Bhagwan Das
(supra) and as pointed out in Rajinder Nath’s case, it
appears to us that the present assessee can be said to be a
person who would be liable to be assessed for the whole or
part of the income that went to the assessment of the bigger
Hindu undivided family in years under appeal and is a person
intimately connected with the assessments of the bigger
Hindu undivided family. The income in this case cannot be
the income of both bigger Hindu undivided family and the
present assessee, it must be either of these two. We are,
therefore, of the opinion that directions given in the
appeals filed by the bigger Hindu undivided family would be
applicable to the present assessee.
On behalf of the assessee it was contended that only
the categories of persons referred to in Sections 30(1) and
30(3) of 1922 Act would be governed by the said expression
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"any person"
Sub-section (3) of Section 31, inter alia, authorises
the Appellate Assistant Commissioner in case of an order
cancelling registration of a firm under sub-section (42) of
Section 23 or refusing to register a firm under sub-section
(4) of Section 23 or Section 26A or to make fresh assessment
or to confirm such order, or cancel it and direct the
Income-tax officer to register the firm or to make a fresh
assessment, as the case may be, or in the case of an order
under sub-section (2) of Section 25 or sub-section (1) of
Section 23A or sub-section (2) of Section 26 or Section 48,
49 or 49F, confirm cancel or vary such order. It also
authorises in case of an order under sub-section (1) of
Section 25A to confirm such order or cancel it and either
direct the Income-tax officer to make further inquiry and
pass a fresh order or to make an assessment in the manner
laid down in sub-section (2) of section 25A. The other cases
were cases of orders under Section 28 or sub-section (6) of
Section 44E or sub-section (5) of Section 44F or sub-section
(1) of Section 46,
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or in case of an appeal against a computation of loss under
Section 24, confirm or vary such computation, or in case of
an appeal under sub-section (1A) of Section 30 decide that
the person is or is not liable to make the deduction and in
the latter case direct the refund of the sum paid under sub-
section (6) of Section 18.
While on these provisions it is material to refer to
sub-section (4) of Section 33 which authorises the Tribunal
after giving both parties an opportunity of being heard to
pass such orders thereon as it thinks fit and to communicate
any such orders to the assessee and to the Commissioner.
The contention on behalf of the assessee is that though
the Appellate Tribunal has wide powers as indicated in sub-
section (4) of Section 33 but the amplitude of that power is
curtailed by other provisions. It was contended that read
with sub-section (3) of Section 34, as assessment order
could not be passed after the expiry of four years from the
end of the year in which the income, profits or gains were
first assessable and is view of the fact that here in the
instant case voluntary returns for the years under question
had been filed by the assessee within time, after four years
no direction could be given by the Tribunal. It was,
secondly, contended that the present smaller Hindu undivided
family was not intimately connected with the assessment of
the bigger Hindu undivided family as contemplated by the
observations of this Court in Income-tax Officer v.
Murlidhar Bhagwan Das (supra), this direction was of no use
and the assessment made on the basis of this direction
cannot be availed of.
We are unable to accept this contention. Firstly it
must be observed that the Tribunal passed the orders and
gave its direction in respect of the years concerned. These
years were the subject matters of appeal before the Tribunal
in the case of bigger H.U.F. It was contended that these
direction were given subsequent to the order under Section
25A and could not affect position thereafter. We are a
unable to accept this position also. As mentioned
hereinbefore, the order under Section 25A was passed in
August, 1954. The bigger Hindu undivided family had applied
for order under Section 25A regarding the disruption of the
Hindu undivided family, the Income-tax Officer rejected that
prayer. The assessee appealed therefrom. In August, 1954,
this order was set aside by the Tribunal and it was held
that the bigger Hindu undivided family had been disrupted.
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In as much as the income liable to be assessed on the
smaller Hindu undivided family would arise only on the
disruption of the larger Hindu
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undivided family, this direction was proper. The order under
Section 25A declares the status of the family and the
smaller Hindu undivided family became liable to be assessed
as a result of disruption of the bigger Hindu undivided
family. The assessment orders however were passed based on
the previous order under section 25A but these orders were
passed for all these four years and the assessments under
appeal for all these four years were pending before the
Tribunal in disposing of which the Tribunal gave the
direction to make the assessments on the smaller Hindu
undivided family. Therefore no question arises as to whether
for subsequent periods directions could have been given.
This is a direction clearly within the contemplation of sub-
section (3) of Section 34. Secondly, we are of the opinion
that the smaller Hindu undivided family is one of the
persons which was clearly contemplated by sub-section (3) of
Section 34 in the facts and circumstances of this case. The
assessability of income and the quantum of the same of the
present assessee was linked up with the assessability of the
bigger Hindu undivided family if the bigger Hindu undivided
family was liable to be assessed if there was no disruption
then there was no income of the smaller Hindu undivided
family. The income in the hands of smaller Hindu undivided
family could then not have been liable to be assessed. I on
the other hand it was the other way that there was a valid
partition, the bigger Hindu undivided family no longer
existed and the smaller Hindu undivided family would be
liable to be assessed. From that point of view it clearly
comes within the ratio of the observation of this Court in
Income-tax officer v. Murlidhar Bhagwan Das (supra). Further
more looked at from another point of view, though the Karta
represented the bigger Hindu undivided family, all the
members of the bigger Hindu undivided family, including
those who were members of the smaller Hindu undivided family
were parties though not oe nomine for all practical
purposes, because they were liable as members of the family
for the amount assessed. In that view of the matter, we are
of the opinion that this direction was quite valid and would
be applicable.
The observations of this Court in the case of
Commissioner of Income-tax Central, Calcutta v. National Taj
Traders are in consonance with the conclusions reached by
us. Tulzapurkar, J. explained in the said decision the
situations in which directions could be given under Section
33B of the Income-tax Act, 1922 where
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there was no express provision like sub-section (3) of
Section 34. In our opinion in the facts of this case, the
present assessee can be said to be "any person" as indicated
in Murlidhar Bhagwan Das (supra) in Section 34(3) of 1922
Act.
The view taken by us is also in consonance with the
observation of this Courts in the case of Commissioner of
Income-tax, Andhra Pradesh v. Vadde Pullaiah & Co.1
Reference was also made to a Bench decision of the
Bombay High Court in the case of Mathuradas B. Mohta v.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Poona, and a decision of this
Court in the case of Commissioner of Income-tax, U.P. v.
Mohd. Shakoor Mohd. Bashir. But in view of the facts and
circumstances of the instant case before us, it is not
necessary to deal with the said decisions.
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On behalf of the assessee, reliance was placed on a
decision of the Division Bench of Gujarat High Court in the
case of Commissioner of Income-tax, Gujarat v. Shantilal
Punjabhai. There an individual Shantilal was a member of the
Hindu undivided family and also a partner of a firm. The
Income-tax officer found that the assessee was the nominee
of the Hindu undivided family in the said firm, and,
therefore, included the share of profits the assessee in
the said firm, in the total income of the Hindu undivided
family.
The decision proceeded on the basis that the Income-tax
Act did not contemplate two different assessees in the same
assessment year for the same taxable income. In that case
the assessee was also an assessee in his own right. In that
case the Court had observed at page 80 of the report that
there were two separate and distinct assessment proceedings,
one in respect of the assessee in his status as an
individual and the other in respect of the Hindu undivided
family. The assessment proceedings in respect of the
assessee, Shantilal, were in respect of his income arising
from his self-acquired and separate property. The assessment
proceedings against the Hindu undivided family, were
proceedings against the entire entity, and though the
assessee, Shantilal, was a member of the family, the
assessment was on the income derived by the Hindu undivided
family from the property or business of the said Hindu
undivided family. In that
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assessment, the income accruing and arising from the
separate property of the assessee, Shantilal could not be
assessed, as the business carried on by the asseseee,
Shantilal, was not the business of the Hindu undivided
family. The Income-tax Officer held that Shantilal was the
nominee of the Hindu undivided family, meaning thereby that
the business belonged to the Hindu undivided family and it
was that conclusion of the Income-tax officer which was
reversed by the Tribunal. The Tribunal holding that the
revenue had failed to prove that the assessee, Shantilal was
the nominee of the family, in other words, that the income
arising from the firm’s business was the income of the Hindu
undivided family. The direction given by the Tribunal was on
the question which was between the revenue and the Hindu
undivided family and the only finding that could be given by
the Tribunal was between the two parties, namely, the Hindu
undivided family and the revenue and not between the revenue
and the assessee. Shantilal, who was not an assessee nor a
party to those assessment proceedings. Therefore, if any
action had to be taken in consequence of the finding or the
direction given by the Tribunal, that action could be taken
not against the assessee, Shantilal, but against the Hindu
undivided family. As would be apparent, the facts of that
case were entirely different.
Here in the instant case the proceeding against the
assessee in the present case could be taken only if there
was disruption of the Hindu undivided family. Therefore in
the assessment of Hindu undivided family. viz. if the bigger
Hindu undivided family was considered to be an existing
entity then in such a case the assessment against the
present assessee could not be sustained. If on the other
hand the assessment on the bigger H.U.F. could not be
sustained because there was disruption of the family as
contended for by the bigger Hinud undivided family then only
the present assessee could be assessed. In that view of the
matter, we are of opinion that the present assessee can be
said to be. a person other then the appealing assessee would
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be affected by the order concerned and would come within the
meaning of "any person" as explained by this Court in the
case of Income-tax officer v. Murlidar Bhagwan Das (supra).
Decision of this Court in the case of Commissioner of
Income-tax, Punjab, Jammu & Kashmir and Himachal Pradesh v.
S. Raghubir Singh Trust was relied on behalf of the
assessee. There the res-
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pondent trust created by R. filed its return of income for
the assessment year 1954-55. Holding that the trust was
invalid, the Income-tax officer assessed the income of the
trust in the hands of R.R. carried the matter in appeal and
other proceedings and ultimately the High Court held that
the trust was valid and the income was the income of the
trust and not of R. The I.T.O. issued a notice on 19th
September, 1961, under Section 34(1)(b) of the Indian I.T.
Act, 1922, to reopen the assessment of the trust. The trust
claimed that the notice was barred by limitation. The
Tribunal accepted the claim and held that trust was a
stranger to the proceedings for the assessment of R and the
second proviso to Section 34(3) did not save the
reassessment proceedings initiated against the trust from
the bar of limitation and the High Court, on a reference,
agreed with the Tribunal. On appeal to this Court it was
held, affirming the decision of the High Court, that even
though the finding of the High Court that the income
belonged to the trust and not to R was a finding necessary
for disposing of the reference in favour of R and it was a
"finding", but the trust was a stranger to the assessment
proceedings of R. and not "any person" within the meaning of
the second proviso to Section 34(3) and, therefore, the
second proviso to Section 34(3) was not attracted and the
reassessment proceedings against the trust were barred by
time. That decision must be understood in the facts of that
case. The settler and the trust cannot be said so intimately
connected as to come within the ratio of Murlidhar Bhagwan
Das’s case. The Court found that assessee trust could not be
said to be intimately connected with the assessment of
Raghubir Singh. As a result of the trust deed failing, there
may be numerous situations viz., there might be resulting
trust or it might be that the trust property would go to
other beneficiaries. It is not necessary for us to explore
or explain those possibilities. But in the facts of this
case, we are of the opinion that whether the income of the
smaller Hindu undivided family, namely the present assessee
is liable to be taxed is so intimately or inextricably
linked up with the question of assessability of bigger Hindu
undivided family, which again is dependent upon the question
whether there was disruption of bigger Hindu undivided
family and that being the very subject-matter of appeals in
the four years in which this direction had been given, we
are of the opinion that directions given in this case are
valid and would save the assessments against the assessee
for the two years in question.
In the aforesaid view of the matter, we are of the
opinion that
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the majority of the learned judges of the High Court were
right in their conclusions and the question was correctly
answered by the majority of the learned judges of the High
Court. The appeals therefore fail and are dismissed with
costs.
H.S.K. Appeals dismissed.
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