Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
PARIMISETTI SEETHARAMAMMA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, HYDERABAD
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
21/04/1965
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
SUBBARAO, K.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 1905 1966 SCR (1) 8
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1986 SC 98 (12)
ACT:
Income-Tax Act, 1922. ss. 3 and 4-Gifts of jewellery and
money made to assessee-Not in the nature of income-Whether
burden of proving if such receipts taxable is upon the
department.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant submitted a return of her income from property
and business for the assessment year 1947-48 and disclosed
in a statement that the Maharani of Baroda had, between
November 1945 and February 1948, "out of natural love and
affection", given her some jewellery and money amounting to
Rs. 5,20,000. The income-Tax Officer accepted this
statement and did not treat the jewellery and money as
taxable income. But while considering the payment of
further similar amounts in the course assessment proceedings
for a subsequent year, the Income-Tax Officer decided to
issue the appellant a notice under s. 34; he eventually held
the gifts made by the Maharani during the years in question
to be remuneration for services rendered by the appellant as
a maid-servant, or Secretary, and therefore to be taxable
income.
In appeal, the Appellate Assistant Commissioner and the
Tribunal ,substantially agreed with the view taken by the
Income-Tax Officer. Upon a reference, the High Court also
decided in favour of the respondent, mainly on the ground
that as the assessee was admittedly in receipt of large sums
of money, in order to claim exemption from tax, the burden
was upon her to-establish that these amounts were voluntary
payments by the Maharani out of natural love and affection:
and that this burden had not been discharged.
On appeal to this Court.
HELD : The burden of proof was wrongly placed on the
appellant. In all cases in which a receipt is sought to be
taxed as income, the burden lies upon the Department to
prove that it is within the taxing provision. Where,
however, a receipt is of the nature of income, the burden of
proving that it is not taxable because it falls within an
exemption provided by the Act, lies upon the assessee. The
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appellant admitted that .she had received jewellery and
diverse sums of money from the Maharani and claimed that as
these were gifts made out of love and affection, they did
not fall within the taxing provisions. It was not her case
that being income, the receipts were exempt from taxation
because of a statutory provision. Consequently, it was for
the Department to establish that these receipts were
chargeable to tax. [12 E-13 A]
Whether a receipt is liable to be treated as income depends
very largely upon the facts and circumstances of each case;
it is open to the income-tax authorities to raise an
inference that a receipt by an assembly is assessable income
where he fails to disclose satisfactorily the source and the
nature of the receipt. But here the source of income was
dis-
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closed by the appellant and there was no dispute about the
truth of the disclosure. [14 C-D]
Commissioner of Income Tax, West Bengal v. Calcutta Agency
Ltd., 19 I.T.R. 191 and A.. Govindarajulu Mudaliar v.
Commissioner of Income-Tax, Hyderabad, 34 I.T.R. 807,
explained and distinguished.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos, 199, 200
of 1964.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order dated
April 13, 1960 of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Case
Referred No. 11 of 1960.
AND
Civil Appeals Nos. 201 and 202 of 1964.
Appeals from the judgment and order dated April 13, 1960 of
the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Case Referred No. 12 of
1960.
N. A. Palkhiwala and R. Ganapathy Iyer, for the appellant
(in all the appeals).
N. D. Karkharnis and R. N. Sachthey for the respondent (in
a the appeals).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shah, J. The appellant carried on business at Nuzvid as a
moneylender and conducted a cinematography theatre. In
respect of income from property and business she submitted a
return of her income for the assessment year 1947-48 and
disclosed in a statement, dated August 26, 1949, that Situ
Devi-Maharani of Baroda-had between November 10, 1945 and
February 11, 1948 " out of natural love and affection" given
to her some jewellery and four amounts of money which
aggregated to Rs. 5,20,000/-. The Income-tax Officer,
Special Circle, Vijayawada, accepted the appellant’s
statement and did not treat the money and jewellery received
by her as taxable income. In the course of assessment
proceedings for the year 1951-52 the Income-tax Officer was
inclined to treat the money and jewellery given to the
appellant as remuneration for services rendered to Sita Devi
as a maid-servant. He accordingly issued a notice under S.
34 of the Income-tax Act and called upon the appellant to
"submit an explanation adducing all documentary and other
evidence in her possession relating to the receipt of assets
admitted by her in her statement" dated August 26, 1949 and
relating to other cash amounts and cheques
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received by her between August 25, 1948 and October 23, 1952
and to other assets possessed by the appellant and disclosed
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by her in her "wealth statement". By her statement, dated
November 27, 1953, the appellant submitted a detailed
explanation about the items referred to in the letter of the
Income-tax Officer and claimed that income received by her
was earned with the aid of property which Sita Devi and the
Yuvarani of Pithapuram had given to her out of love and
affection from time to time. On December 26, 1954, the
appellant was examined on oath before the Income-tax
Officer. She stated :
"The credits in my accounts are all out of
gifts. As to correspondence I have
very few letters but such of them as I have
contain matters relating to others. I shall
produce them if you are prepared to exclude
those portions. What other record I have I
gave to my auditors. I have no objection to
their producing all those records before you.
In fact I desire that they should be so.......
A complete inventory of records with my
auditor will be given to you on Monday and
you may look into them. I can give full
particulars for all deposits in my accounts.
I have not purchased any jewellery worth
mentioning. I have filed a statement for
that. All my jewels are gifted by Srimati
Seetha Devi."
The Income-tax Officer by his order, dated March 31, 1956,
held that the "gifts made by Sita Devi were remuneration for
services rendered by the appellant as a maid-servant or
Secretary to the Princess and were accordingly taxable as
income in her hands". For the year 1946-47 he determined
the escaped income of the appellant at Rs. 4,70,000/- (Rs.
4,00,000/- being the value of jewellery and Rs. 70,000/-
cash). He determined the escaped income for the year 1947-
48 at Rs. 2,50,000/-, for the year 1950-51 at Rs. 96,600/-
and for the year 1951-52 at Rs. 30,000/-.
In appeal the Appellate Assistant Commissioner agreed with
the Income-tax Officer that the receipts were income taxable
under the Income-tax Act, but he valued the jewellery
received by the appellant in the account year corresponding
to the assessment year 1946-47 at Rs. 20,000/- and directed
consequential modifications in that order. The Income-tax
Appellate Tribunal held that the Income-tax Officer was
justified in reopening the assess-
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ment under s. 34, and that cash, cheques and jewellery
received by the appellant from Sita Devi in the previous
year corresponding to the assessment years 1946-47, 1947-48,
1950-51 and 1951-52 being remuneration for services
rendered, were taxable.
The Tribunal submitted two consolidated statements of case-
one in respect of the assessment years 1946-47 and 1951-52
and the other in respect of the years 1947-48 and 1950-51
and submitted in each of the statements the following
question :
"Whether on the facts and in the circumstances
of the case what the assessee received in the
relevant years is assessable to tax and
whether Section 34 of the Income Tax Act could
be invoked in regard to the years 1947-48,
1948-49 and 1950-51 ?"
(Reference to the year 1948-49 in the question is due to
oversight as no reference was asked for and none was made in
respect of that year.) The High Court held that there was
evidence before the Tribunal to support the finding that the
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appellant was an employee of Sita Devi and that the cash,
cheques and jewellery admitted as received by the appellant
were not given to her as gifts made out of love and
affection, but as remuneration for services rendered. In
the reference relating to the years 1947-48 and 1950-51 the
High Court called for a supplementary statement, for
determination of the question whether action under s. 34 was
justifiable. The Tribunal submitted a supplementary
statement and thereafter the High Court answered the second
branch of the question holding, that the action of the
Income-tax Officer under s. 34 was justified. The appellant
has appealed to this Court against the order of the High
Court recording answers in the two references.
It is not necessary to consider whether the Income-tax
Officer was competent to issue a notice under s. 34 of the
Income-tax Act for the years 1947-48 and 1950-51, for in our
view the property received by the appellant was not
remuneration given to her by Sita Devi for services rendered
or to be rendered by her.
The High Court in dealing with the question about the
liability of the receipts to tax observed :
"The Supreme Court in the case of the Commis-
sioner of Income-tax v. Calcutta Agency Ltd.
(19
L5Sup. CI/65-2
I.T.R. 191) observed that the burden of
proving the necessary facts in order to
entitle the assessee to claim exemption was
upon the assessee. It would, therefore,
appear that where admittedly the assessee was
in receipt of large sums of money as showji in
the accounts submitted by her, that they were
outside the pale of taxable income was a
matter which had to be established by the
assessee herself. The question is as to
whether the assessee has discharged the burden
that lay upon her. She did not produce any
evidence in support of her case that these
amounts were gifts made by Sita Devi out of
love and affection. When she was asked to
lead evidence to substantiate her contention
she pleaded utter inability lo do anything of
the kind and denied the existence of any
correspondence which would throw any light
upon the question and simply contended herself
by making bland statements bland ’Her Highness
Sita Devi Gaekwad of Baroda used to give me
these gifts according- to the will and
pleasure of her highness’. With regard to the
jewellery that she received from Princess Sita
Devi she makes the same statement to say that
these were received -is gifts on various
occasions in India and she says ’I do not have
any correspondence regarding these gifts The
bare allegation supported by any
evidence, in our opinion, was not sufficient
to discharge the burden which lay upon the
assessee. the burden lay upon the assessee
In this case to establish that the amounts
received were voluntary payments made by the
Princess Out of love and affection."
In so observing the High Court, in our judgment, has
committed an error of law",. By ss. 3 & 4 the Act imposes a
general ability to tax upon all income. But the Act does
not provide that whatever is received by a person must be
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regarded as income liable to tax. In all cases in which a
receipt is sought to be taxed as income, the burden lies
upon the Department to prove that it is within the taxing,
provision. Where however a receipt is of the nature of
income, the burden of proving, that it is not taxable
because it falls within in exemption provided by the Act
lies upon the assessee. The appellant admitted that she had
received jewellery and diverse sums of money from Sita Devi
and she claimed that these were gifts made out of love and
affection. The case of the appellant was that the receipts
did not fall within the taxing
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provision : it was not her case that being income the
receipts were exempt from taxation because of a statutory
provision. It was, therefore, for the Department to
establish that these receipts were chargeable to tax. The
decision of this Court in the Commissioner of Income-tax,
West Bengal v. Calcutta Agency Ltd. (1) lends no support to
the proposition which the High Court has enunciated. That
was a case in which the taxpayer was claiming under s.
10(2)(xv) allowance for an expenditure out of the income of
the business and to establish such a claim indisputably the
burden lay upon the taxpayer. The following observations
made by Kania C.J., in delvering the judgment of the Court
make the ratio of the judgment clear
"Now it is clear that this being a claim for
exemption of an amount, contended to be an
expenditure fallen- under section 10(2)(xv),
the burden of proving the necessary facts in
that connection was on the assessee, it being
common ground that the commission was due and
bad become piyable and was therefore the busi-
ness income of the assessee company liable to
be taxed in the assessment year.’
Counsel for the Commissioner submitted that where an
assessee fails to prove satisfactorily the nature of the
receipt, it is open to the Income-tax Officer to infer that
the receipt is taxable, and relied upon the observations
made in A. Govindarajulu Mudaliar v. Commissioner of
Hyderabad (2) by Venkatarama Aiyar, J., who speaking for the
Court observed:
"There is ample authority for the position
that where an assessee fails to prove
satisfactorily the source and nature of
certain amount of cash received during, the
accounting year, the Income-tax Officer is
entitled to draw the inference that the
receipts are of an assessable nature."
But these observations cannot be read divorced from their
context. In the books of the firm in which the assessee was
a partner certain amounts were found credited to the
assessee, and when called upon to explain how he came to
possess those amounts, he rendered an explanation which was
not accepted by the Tribunal, and the amounts were treated
as income liable to tax. It was argued on behalf of the
assessee in Govindarajulu Mudaliar’s case (2) that even if
the case set up by him was not accepted by
(1) 19 I.T.R. 191.
(2) 34 T.T.R 807.
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the Tribunal, it did not follow as a matter of law that the
amounts in question were income received during the previous
year, and it was for the Department to adduce evidence to
show from what source the income was derived and why it
should be treated as concealed income, and in the absence of
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such evidence the finding of the Tribunal was erroneous.
This Court held that it was open to the Income-tax Officer
when the assessee failed satisfactorily to disclose the
source and nature of the receipt to treat that as concealed
income of the previous year in which the assessee was being
taxed. The observation relied upon does not lay down a
proposition that it may be inferred that a receipt is
taxable as income because the assessee fails to lead all
evidence in support of the case pleaded by him that the
receipt is not within the taxing provision. Whether a
receipt is liable to be treated as income depends very
largely upon the facts and circumstances of each case : it
is open to the Income-tax authorities to raise an inference
that a receipt by an assessee is assessable income where he
fails to disclose satisfactorily the source and the nature
of the receipt. But in this case the source of the income
was ,disclosed by the appellant, and there was no dispute
about the truth of that disclosure.
The High Court disposed of the reference holding that the
onus of proving that the receipts were not taxable lay upon
the view expressed by us the answer recorded by the High
Court on the taxability of the receipts must be discharged.
Sincethe High Court has not considered the evidence, we
would normally have remanded the case for disposal of the
reference according to law. But this proceeding has been
pending for a very long time, and in enforcement of the
orders of assessment the entire property of the appellant
has been attached. We have, therefore, thought it fit to
hear and decide the reference on the merits.
In the view of the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal, in deter-
mining the question whether receipts by the appellant
represents income liable to be brought to tax under the
Income-tax Act, it could not be said that there were no
materials justifying the Department in treating the assessee
as being an employee of Sita Devi, for apart from the
information the Department had collected from various
sources, there were clear indications that the assessee was
acting as the local agent of Sita Devi in Pittapuram for
disbursing salary to various servants of Sita Devi, and that
she was describe as the Private Secretary to Sita Devi in a
"bill" issued by the
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Bombay Garage Ltd., and that in any event it was for the
appellant to prove her case of gift. The Tribunal then
observed that the word "income" is not precisely defined in
the Act and the Act seeks to bring to tax all income,
profits and pins from whatever source derived and inasmuch
as receipt of the amounts and jewellery in question had been
admitted it was for the appellant to establish that it was
not liable to be taxed under the Act. Observing then that
the appellant had not placed "all the cards, on the table
which will go to show the real nature of the receipt of the
amounts and the jewellery" and had declined to produce the
correspondence which passed between her and Sita Devi, but
merely offered to produce certain extracts from the letters
which the Income-tax Officer refused to admit, it was open
to the Income-tax authorities to raise an inference that the
receipts were income, when ample opportunity was given to
the assessee to explain the nature of the receipts and since
the appellant had not chosen to do so, she was not entitled
to the exemption under s. 4(3)(vii).
The conclusion of the Tribunal recorded on this process of
reasoning was open to grave challenge in point of law. It
does not appear that any serious attempt was made by the
appellant to prove that the receipts under discussion were
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exempt from tax, because they were casual and of a
nonrecurring nature. The appellant’s case primarily was
that the receipts were not taxable because they were not
income chargeable to tax. The Tribunal rightly observed
that the information collected by the Department from
different sources which consisted of record of ex parte
statements of certain persons about the relation between
Sita Devi and the appellant, which they even declined to
give in writing, could have no value in establishing the
case of the Department. There remained two pieces of
evidence on which the Tribunal relied-(i) admission made by
the appellant that she acted as the local agent in Nuzvid
for disbursing salary to servants of Sita Devi and (ii) in a
"bill" issued by the Bombay Garage Ltd. the appellant was
described as "Private Secretary to Princess Sita Devi". But
these circumstances could not establish that what was given
to her by Sita Devi was remuneration for services rendered
or to be rendered. Realizing this infirmity, the Tribunal
observed that the burden of proving that the receipts were
not income lay upon the appellant. The Tribunal did not
infer that as remuneration for disbursing salary to Sita
Devi’s servants she was given large amounts of money and
jewellery. Description of the appellant in the cash-memo
issued by the Bombay Garage Ltd. as "Private Secretary to
Princess Sita Devi" could have no evidentiary value.
1 6
It is not claimed that there was evidence on the record that
this was the general repute of the appellant. Description
of the appellant as Private Secretary of Sita Devi in a
stray cash-memo issued by a third party about the source of
whose knowledge there is not an iota of evidence, could not
evidence a relationship of master and servant : much less
could it prove that what was given by Sita Devi to the
appellant was remuneration for service rendered. The
conclusion of the Tribunal is, therefore, based on matters
which may at the highest create some suspicion, and upon its
view that the burden of proving that the receipts were not
taxable lay upon the appellant. But a conclusion recorded
by the Tribunal by wrongly throwing the burden of proof upon
the assessee cannot be regarded as binding upon the High
Court in a reference under
Counsel for the Commissioner contended that beside the two
circumstances relied upon by the Tribunal, there were other
circumstances on which the conclusion of the Tribunal could
be sustained. These circumstances, counsel submitted, are
on the record and must have weighed with the Tribunal in
arriving at its finding that the receipts by the appellant
were of the nature of income. These were (a) that the
appellant belonged to a family of Dasis who are generally
employed in the ruling family of Pittapuram in a menial
capacity; (b) that the appellant was receiving a salary of
Rs. 8/- per month from the Maharaja of Pittapuram: (c) that
the appellant was associated with Sita Devi for at least 8
years before the earliest year of account relevant in these
appeals; (d) that large amounts in cash and also jewellery
were given to the appellant from time to time after Sita
Devi married the Gaekwad of Baroda; (e) that the gifts
commenced immediately after Sita Devi married the Gaekwad of
Baroda; (f) that the appellant assisted Sita Devi in
securing divorce from the Yuvaraja of Vuyyur and in getting
married to the Gaekwad of Baroda; (g) that the appellant
lived with Sita Devi in London in the year 1949-50 and also
at Baroda; and (h) that similar sifts were given to one
Narasinghrao "associate of the appellant" and to the
daughters of the appellant’s sisters. There is no evidence
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in support of (f), and the circumstances (a) to (e) & (g)
cannot possibly lead to the conclusion that property of
large value was given to the appellant by Sita Devi as
remuneration for performance of service. Circumstance (h)
is irrelevant.
On the first part of the two questions it must be recorded
that what the assessee received in the relevant years of
account was not
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assessable to tax. it is unnecessary to record, as already
observed, a finding on the second branch of the question,
whether s. 34 of the Income-tax Act could properly be
involved in regard to those receipts.
costs of the appellant in this Court and in the High Court.
One hearing fee.
Appeals allowed.
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