Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MOTILAL CHHADAMI LAL JAIN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX , DELHI ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT08/04/1991
BENCH:
RANGNATHAN, S.
BENCH:
RANGNATHAN, S.
KULDIP SINGH (J)
KASLIWAL, N.M. (J)
CITATION:
1991 SCR (2) 237 1991 SCC Supl. (1) 229
JT 1991 (2) 256 1991 SCALE (1)669
ACT:
Income Tax Act, 1961: Assessment Year 1962-63, 1968-69,
1969-70 and 1973-74--Assessee Hindu undivided family
consisting of Appellant Chhadamilal Jain as the Karta and
his son-Income derived from property as well as hire, rent
and commission from the lessee Jain Glass Works (p) Ltd.
Company--Lease Deeds dated 3.5.1960 and 5.5.62 with the
company--Rental income--Out of the annual rent of Rs.21,000,
lessee to pay Rs.10,000, direct to a College-Whether this
amount is includible in the income of the Assessee ? Held
yes; liable to pay tax on the entire rental income.
Section II(1)(a)/Section 4(3)(i) of the Income Tax Act
1922- Income from certain properties transferred to a
charitable Trust-Vesting of-Properties in the Trustees -
Income accruing from such properties is income of the Trust
and not of the Assessee- Registered Conveyance of the
properties to the trustees is necessary but it is not
necessary where owner himself is the sole trustee.
HEADNOTE:
For the assessment year 1962-63 the Assessee-family
returned Rs.11,000 as the rent received from the lessee
Company. Regarding the balance of Rs.10,000,it was
contended on behalf of the assessee that this amount being
directly payable by the lessee company under the lease deed
dated 5.5.62 to the Trust College, this ceased to be the
income of the assessee. This contention was negatived by
the Department right upto the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal.
The other point of dispute concerned the income
accruing from certain properties claimed to have been
transferred by the family to a charitable Trust created
under a Trust Deed dated 14.11.1947. The I.T.O. assessed
the income from these properties in the hands of the family
taking the view that the Trust deed only purported to
transfer income from the properties and not the corpus and
therefore, this income was not eligible for exemption under
section 4 (3) (i) of the Indian Income Tax Act 1922.
Assessee’s appeal to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner
failed but further appeal to the Tribunal succeeded.
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Thus the assessee aggrieved on the first contention and
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the department on the second contention sought references to
the High Court. In respect of assessment year 1962-63 two
questions were referred to the High Court on the above two
points. A question in respect of the first point was also
referred for the assessment years 1968-69 and 1969-70 and
two questions on the two points mentioned above were
referred to the High Court in respect of assessment Year
1972-73.
As the High Court answered these questions against the
assessee, it preferred four appeals covering the four
assessment year in question.
Allowing the appeals in respect of assessment years
1968-69 and 1969-70 and party allowing the other two appeals
in respect of assessment years 1962-63 and 1973-74, this
Court,
HELD:(1) The assessee is the owner of the properties in
question leased out to the company on an annual rent of
Rs.21,000. This is income of the family. The Assessee’s
agreement with the company that Rs.10,000 out of the rent
due to it should be paid directly to the College is only a
mode of application of the income by the family which makes
no difference in its liability to tax on the entire rent of
Rs.21,000 nor does the fact that the college has been given
a right to sue for and recover this sum directly from the
company in case of default, alter this position. The payment
to, or recovery of, Rs.10,000 by the college will only
discharge, in part, the liability of the company to pay a
rent of Rs.21,000 to the assessee under the lease deed. The
creation of a charge in favour of the college does not make
any difference. It only obliges the company to pay a part of
the rent to the college on behalf of the assessee but the
existence of a mere obligation is not sufficient to
constitute diversion of income. Where the obligation flows
out of an antecedent and independent title in the former, it
effectively slices away a part of the corpus of the right of
the latter to receive the entire income and so it would be a
case of diversion. On the other hand, where the obligation
is self-imposed or gratuitous it is only a case of an
application of income. We, therefore, agree with the High
Court that the assessee is liable to tax on the entire
rental income of Rs.21,000. [245F-246A, E;247C-D,248B]
(2) A registered conveyance of immovable property to
the trustees is necessary where the trustees are persons
other than the author. But this requirement does not arise
where the author is himself to be the trustee. While a trust
is not complete until the trust property is vested in
trustees for the benefit of the cestui que trust, this can
be
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done by the settlor, where he is himself the trustee, by a
declaration of trust, using language which, taken in
connection with his acts, shows a clear intention on his
part to divest himself of all beneficial interest in it and
to exercise dominion and control over it exclusively as a
trustee. Section 6 of the Indian Trusts Act, makes this
clear beyond all doubt. The assessee’s full ownership of an
unqualified right to enjoy the properties gets restricted by
the trust deed, which creates an overriding title in the
beneficiaries regarding the use of the income from such
properties in the manner set out therein and no other. In
fact after the execution of such a trust deed, the
properties are no longer held by the assessee as the
absolute owner thereof but as a trustee with a legal
obligation to apply the income exclusively for charitable
purposes, thus attracting the provisions for exemption
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contained in the Act. We are inclined to take the view that
the Trust deed of 1947 should be construed as a valid trust
which has the effect of diverting the income at the source
and that the income thereafter ceased to be the income of
the assessee-family.[248G-249B, C-D; E-F]
C.I.T. v. Sitaldas Tirathdas, [1961] 41 I.T.R.367,
S.C.Murlidhar Himmatsingka v. I.T.O., [1961] 62 I.T.R.323,
S.C.Mahaliram Santhalia v. C.I.T., [1958] 33 I.T.R.261,
referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos.1426 to
1428 (NT) of 1975.
From the judgment and Orders dated 24.2.1972 &
23.4.1974 of the Allahabad High Court in Income Tax
Reference Nos.456/68 & 47 of 1973.
WITH
Civil Appeal No.1653 (NT) of 1991.
Raja Ram Aggarwal and E.C.Aggarwal for the Appellant.
Dr.V.Gauri Shankar, B.B.Ahuja, S.Rajappa and
Ms.A.Subhashini for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
RANGANATHAN,J. These four matters arise out of income
tax assessments of the same assessee and involve the same
questions. We grant leave in the Special Leave Petition
after condoning the delay of 141 days in the circumstances
set out in the application for condonation
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of delay and proceed to dispose of all the four appeals by
this common judgment.
The assessee--appellant in all these cases is a Hindu
Undivided Family (HUF) known as M/s Moti Lal Chhadami Lal
Jain carrying on business at Ferozabad. The HUF consisted of
the karta, Chhadamilal Jain, and his son Bimal Kumar Jain.
Appeal No.1426 of 1975 relates to the assessment year
1962-63, Civil Appeal Nos.1427 and 1428 relate to assessment
years 1968-69 and 1969-70 and the other remaining Civil
Appeal relates to the assessment year 1973-74.
The facts relevant for the assessment year 1962-63 may
now be set out:
For the assessment year in question (the previous year
for which ended on 12.7.1961), the assessee HUF derived
income from property as well as hire, rent and commission
from Jain Glass Works(P) Ltd. (hereinafter referred to as
‘the company’). On 3.5.1960, the assessee family had granted
a perpetual lease of certain buildings, furnaces and lands
owned by it to the company. It appears that a firm known as
Jain Glass Works P.Ltd. had taken on lease the above assets
of the HUF at an annual rent of Rs.62,000 for running its
business in the manufacture of glassware. The lease deed
recited that the company which had taken over the running
business of the firm was to continue to have its factory for
manufacture of glassware on the land belonging to the joint
family and continue to use and enjoy all the facilities for
the manufacture of glassware on the bhatties belonging to
the family. In consideration of the use of all the above
premises, the company was to pay the HUF an annual rent of
Rs.21,000 for the period during which the company continued
to have its factory in the premises of the lessor and also
to pay the HUF a commission at one per cent of the total
turnover of the company for financial year. Under clause 3
of the lease deed, the company was to pay the annual rent of
Rs.21,000 in the following manner:
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(a) Rs.10,000 to Shri Chhadami Lal Jain Trust Degree
College, Ferozabad.
(b) Rs.11,000 direct to the lessor M/s.Moti Lal
Chhadami Lal, HUF.
On 5.5.1962, another agreement was entered into between
four parties the two male members of the assessee HUF, the
company, the
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Chhadami Lal Jain Trust (hereinafter referred to as ‘the
Trust’) and the Chhadami Lal Jain Degree College
(hereinafter referred to as ‘the College) which is an
educational institution run by the Trust. This document
referred to the earlier lease agreement between the family
and the company and its terms. The agreement recorded, inter
alia that out of the total rent of Rs.21,000 payable by the
company, a sum of Rs.10,000 would be paid to the college and
the balance to the HUF in four equal quarterly installments.
Clause 7 of the deed reads as follows:
"That in the event of the ‘second party’ failing
to pay the rent every quarter in accordance with
the above mentioned conditions or violates the
terms of this agreement, then, in the first place,
the ‘fourth party’ shall have full rights to
recover Rs.10,000 (ten thousand rupees) per year
as rent by recourse to the Court in whatsoever
manner it deems fit and shall have first charge on
the full property mentioned below. Subsequently,
the ‘first party’ shall recover the balance of
Rs.11,000 per year rent alongwith the interest
costs and expenses from the ‘second party’ and
such recovery will not be objected to by the
‘second party’ or its successors."
For the assessment year 1962-63 the assessee family
returned Rs.11,000 as lease rent received from the company.
It was claimed that the balance of Rs.10,000 was the income
of the trust and hence not part of the income of the
assessee. It was explained that the University, while
granting affiliation to the college had imposed a condition
that security should be given for the running expenses of
the college and as such a security was given by creating a
charge of Rs.10,000 in favour of the college on the
immovable property of the joint family. The contention was
that the sum of Rs.10,000 out of the rent payable by the
lessee for the property got diverted by overriding title to
the college and ceased to be the income of the assessee.
This contention was negatived by the Income Tax Officer
(I.T.O.), the Appellate Assistant Commissioner (A.A.C.) and
the Income tax Appellate Tribunal (the Tribunal). The
Tribunal, however, directed the I.T.O. to give appropriate
relief u/s 88 in respect of this amount.
Another bone of contention between the parties related
to the income from certain properties claimed to have been
transferred by the assessee family to the Trust on
14.11.1947. On that date, the assessee executed a Trust
Deed which was also registered at Ferozabad. By this deed,
Chhadami Lal, the karta of the assessee family,
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expressed his desire to create a charitable trust which
would fulfill the needs of education, religion and medical
facilities in the town of Ferozabad. He, therefore,
proceeded to create a trust which would run a boarding
house, a dharamshala with a temple, a commercial and
industrial Institute, a Jain Dharam School, a Jain
Aushadhalya, a students’ scholarship fund and a public
library and reading room. Clause 3 of the deed provided.
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"That the expenditure of the trust and expenses
for the above-mentioned objects will be made from
the income of the following properties which
income will be of the trust. I will have no
personal concern with this income nor will be used
for my personal benefit but will be spent on the
aims of the trust."
Chhadami Lal constituted himself the trustee to look after
the trust as long as he lived and manage its affairs. The
deed then proceeded to set out the details of "the property
the income from which will be used for the purpose of the
trust". The properties were said to be of the value of
Rs.6,12,000 and to yield an income of about Rs.18,000 per
annum.
On the strength of the above document, the assessee HUF
was not assessed on the income from the properties for the
assessment year 1949-50. However, while scrutinizing the
accounts for the assessment years 1951-52 to 1959-60, the
I.T.O. assessed the income from the properties in the hands
of the family, as he was of opinion that the Trust Deed only
purported to transfer the income from the properties to the
Trust but not the corpus thereof and that, therefore, the
income was not eligible for exemption under s.4(3)(i) of the
Indian Income Tax Act, 1922. Appeals by the assessee to the
A.A.C. and the Tribunal were unsuccessful.
It was be mentioned here that, on 9th August, 1960,
Shri Chhadami Lal and his son had executed another
registered document. This document referred to the creation
of the Trust in 1947 which, it was stated, had been running
several educational and charitable institutions regularly
and successfully. The document proceeded to say:
"Thus there has been a great progress in the
working of the above-mentioned institutions and
the property above mentioned was felt to be
insufficient in the year 1957; therefore, both of
us thought it proper that in order to run
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the trust successfully, the properties mentioned
below should also be invested in the trust and to
be under the same so that Shri Chhadami Lal Jain
Trust should always run properly and the public
good that has been done upto now, as stated above,
should continue to be so done in the same rather
better way. Public good should continue to be
done. Therefore, we executants had given to the
trust on the Ist July, 1957 the following property
the value of which was Rs.25,000 [by] canceling mutation
thereof in respect thereof in our name and giving up
possession of the below mentioned property, at the same
time, had transferred it to the Trust. Since the Ist of
July, 1957, we have had no connection with the property
mentioned below nor shall we have any concern with it is the
future."
The deed then proceeded to mention the details of the
property "which has been in the use of the trust above
mentioned since 1957 and will continue likewise to be in the
use of the trust always". It then proceeded to appoint
eleven persons who were to be trustees to continue to run
the Trust and the institutions. Chhadami Lal, Bimal Kumar
and his wife were three of the trustees, the others being
outsiders. Then followed several clauses. Clause 3 referred
to "the properties which has been given to the trust before
and now" and empowered the trustees to sell or lease out the
land to construct a building for the trust if it was found
necessary. Clause 5, however, prohibited the trustees from
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"putting the property of the trust to personal use, wasting
it or from mortgaging and selling it except in accordance
with clause 3."
Despite this document, the I.T.O. assessed the family
on the income from the above properties. Appeals to the
A.A.C. failed but the Tribunal allowed the appeals of the
assessee. For the assessment year 1962-63, the Tribunal,
following its earlier orders in the case of the Trust viz.
I.T.A. No.17157 of 1963-64 and I.T.A. No.11774 of 1964-65,
allowed the assessee’s appeal.
The assessee, aggrieved by the Tribunal’s decision on
the first contention and the department, aggrieved by the
decision on the second contention, sought references to the
High Court. Thus, two questions were referred to the High
Court in relation to the assessment year 1962-63
(I.T.Ref.456/1968). These questions were:
(1) Whether on a proper construction of the lease deeds
dated
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3.5.1960 and 5.5.1962 and the accompanying facts and
circumstances of the case, the sum of Rs.10,000 is the
income of the assessee and not that of Chhadami Lal
Jain Degree College?
(2) Whether, on the facts and circumstances of the
case, the income of Rs.14,000 from properties purported
to have been transferred to Seth Chhadami Lal Jain
Trust was not assessable in the hands of the assessee
family?
I.T.R.47 of 1973 related to assessment years 1968-69
and 1969-70 for which the relevant previous years ended on
1.9.67 and 1.9.68. For these assessment years also, the
inclusion of the income of Rs.13,920 from the properties
claimed to have been transferred to the Trust in the
assessments of the HUF having been deleted by the Tribunal
following its orders in the appeals relating to 1964-65 to
1967-68, the following question was referred to the High
Court (in R.A.Nos.88 and 89 of 1972-73 dated 8.12.72):
"Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of
the case, income of Rs.13,920 from properties
purported to have been transferred to the trust
was not assessable in the hands of assessee
family?"
It may be mentioned that though a reference was also made by
the Tribunal on the other question regarding income from the
property (in R.A.No.90 and 91 of 1972-73 dated 7.3.72), that
was not the subject matter of I.T.R. 47/73 and hence we are
not concerned with that here.
In I.T.R.168/79 which relates to the assessment year
1973-74, three questions were referred to the High Court, of
which we are concerned with only two here. These are:
"(2) Whether on the facts and in the circumstances
of the case, income of Rs.6,329 from properties
purported to have been transferred to the Trust
was not assessable in the hands of the assessee
family?
(3) Whether on a proper construction of the lease
deeds dated 3.5.1960 and 5.5.1962 and accompanying
facts and circumstances of the case, the sum of
Rs.10,000 is the income of the assessee and not
that of Chhadami Lal Jain Degree College?"
245
The questions referred were answered by the High Court
against the assessee and in favour of the Department. The
judgment of the High Court in I.T.R.456/68 is reported in
(1977) 106 I.T.R.909 (All). This judgment contains the
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reasons for the conclusion on the question relating to the
rental income is concerned. But so far as the other question
is concerned, the High Court answered it following its
earlier decision in I.T.R.72 of 1969 arising out of the
Tribunal’s orders in the case of the trust in
I.T.A.Nos.17157 of 1963-64 and I.T.A.No.11774 of 1964-65
referred to earlier and reported in (1977) 106 I.T.R. 179
(All.). The judgment in I.T.R. 47/73 follows the decision in
I.T.R. 456/68. In I.T.R. 168/79, again, the ruling in (1977)
106 I.T.R. 909 (All.) has been followed and the decision
given against the assessee. These are the three judgments in
appeal before us.
Before considering the questions arising in these
appeals we would like to point out that there is no
information before us as to what has happened (a) in the
assessment years 1950-51 to 1959-60; (b) in the intervening
assessment years 1963-64 to 1967-68 and, again, from 1970-71
to 1972-73; (c) in the assessment years subsequent thereto;
and (d) for assessment years 1968-69 and (1969-70 so far as
the issue regarding the rental income is concerned. We are
indeed surprised that even the assessee who, in all
probability, must have been affected by the assessments for
those years, should not have cared to place the relevant
information before us. It is regrettable that neither party
has cared to verify whether any appeals before the
authorities or references in the High Court or appeals or
special leave petitions are pending for those years. It
would have been helpful to both sides if an attempt had been
made to find out all the information so that all the
connected matters could have been consolidated and heard
together.
So far as the question of rental income is concerned,
we agree with the view taken by the High Court. The assessee
is the owner of the properties in question and has leased
out the properties in question to the company for an annual
rent of Rs.21,000. This is the income of the family. The
assessee’s agreement with the company is only that
Rs.10,000, out of the rent due to it, should be paid
directly to the College. This is only a mode of application
of the income by the family which will make no difference in
its liability to tax on the entire rent of Rs.21,000. Nor
does the fact that the College has been given a right, by
the four party agreement, to sue for and recover the sum of
Rs.10,000 directly from the company in case of default alter
this position. That is only a mode of recourse provided to
the College for the enforcement of the promise made to it by
the assessee. The payment to, or recovery
246
of, Rs.10,000 by the College will only discharge in part the
liability of the company to pay a rent of Rs.21,000 to the
assessee under the lease deed.
It is contended on behalf of the assessee that it would
not be correct to treat this a case of a mere application,
by the assessee, of a part of the rental income due to, and
receivable by, it. The right given to the College to sue the
company, directly coupled with the creation of a charge in
its favour on the property yielding the rent for such
payment, has the result of diverting that part of the rental
income at the very source or inception. Under the second
agreement, it is urged, not merely an amount of Rs.10,000
per annum but the very right to receive, and enforce the
payment of, that part of the rent is assigned to the College
by the assessee. Its effect is that the income from the
property thereafter accrues partly to the assessee and
partly to the College with the result that the assessee is
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left only with the right to receive Rs.11,000 from the
company every year. Reliance is placed, in this context, on
the decisions in C.I.T. v. Sitaldas Tirathdas, [1961] 41
I.T.R. 367, S.C. and Murlidhar Himmatsingka v. I.T.O.,
[1966] 62 I.T.R. 323, S.C.
We are of opinion that this contention cannot be
accepted. As we have pointed out earlier, the right given to
the College to sue the company is only the right to recover
part of amount which has already accrued to the assessee.
The creation of a charge in favour of the College does not
make any difference. It only obliges the company to pay a
part of the rent to the College on behalf of the assessee
but the existence of a mere obligation is not sufficient to
constitute diversion of income. The classic statement of the
true principle is set out in C.I.T. v. Sitaldas Tirathdas,
(supra):
"Obligation, no doubt, there are in every case,
but it is the nature of the obligation which is
the decisive factor. There is a difference between
an amount which a person is obliged to apply out
of his income and an amount which by the nature of
the obligation cannot be said to be a part of the
income of the assessee. Where by the obligation,
income is diverted before it reaches the assessee,
it is deductible. But where the income is required
to be applied to discharge an obligation (self
imposed and gratuitous) after such income reaches
the assessee, the same consequence in law does not
follow. It is the first kind of payment which can
truly be excused and not the second. The second
payment is merely
247
an obligation to pay another a portion of one’s
own income which has been received and is since
applied. The first is a case in which the income
never reaches the assessee who, even if he was to
collect it, does so, not as part of his income but
for and on behalf of the persons to whom it is
payable."
In the above passage, it is clear, the expressions "reaches
the assessee" and "has been received" have been used not in
the sense of the income being received in cash by one person
or another. What the passage emphasises is the nature of the
obligation by reason of which the income becomes payable to
a person other than the one entitled to it. Where the
obligation flows out of an antecedent and independent title
in the former (such as, for example, the rights of
dependents to maintenance or of coparceners on partition, or
rights under a statutory provision or an obligation imposed
by a third party and the like), it effectively slices away a
part of the corpus of the right of the latter to receive the
entire income and so it would be a case of diversion. On the
other hand, where the obligation is self-imposed or
gratuitous (as here) it is only a case of an application of
income.
The case of a sub-partnership, referred to on behalf of
the assessee, is really a case on the borderline. It is
possible to take a view that it is nothing more than a case
of one partner agreeing to divide his share of profits from
a firm with others and, indeed, this was the view taken
earlier: see, Mahaliram Santhalia v. C.I.T., [1958] 33
I.T.R. 261. But, apparently in view of the commercial
necessities which compel the formation of sub-partnerships,
a series of judicial decisions, approved in Murlidhar
Himmatsingka v. I.T.O., (supra) have held that they
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represent cases of diversion. That analogy cannot be
extended to cases such as the present.
We would also like in this context to refer to
S.24(1)(iv) of the Income-tax Act, 1961. It provides for a
deduction, in the computation of income from house property,
in respect of the amount of an annual charge on the
property. The statutory provision was initially wide enough
to rope in cases of such charges irrespective of the purpose
for which they were created and even where they were
voluntarily created by an assessee. But the provision has
been amended w.e.f.1.4.1969 to exclude deduction of an
annual charge voluntarily by the assessee. The case before
us is not one of income from house property computed under
Ss.22-24 and we are referring to this only as a matter of
interest. This amendment also indicates that a charge
voluntarily created would
248
stand on an different footing from super-imposed charges.
For these reasons, we agree with the view taken by the
High Court and hold that the assessee is liable to tax on
the entire rental income of Rs.21,000.
Turning now to the second question before us, it talks
of the income from the properties "purported to have been
transferred to the Trust" and in the words in quotation lies
the crucial issue in the case. There is no dispute that the
income from the property is applied wholly for religious and
charitable purposes. S.4(3)(i) of the Indian Income tax Act,
1922 and its successor section 11(1)(a) of the Income-tax
Act, 1961 (insofar as they were applicable to the assessment
years before us) exempt the income derived by an assessee
from "property held in trust or other legal obligation" for
such purposes. This exemption has been denied to the
assessee on the short ground that the properties (with the
income from which we are concerned) continue to vest in the
assessee and have not been effectively transferred to the
Trust. This is said to be so far two reasons. The first is
that the trust has been created in respect of immovable
properties of the value of more then Rs.100 and this is
possible only if the properties had been duly conveyed to
the trustees by a deed duly stamped and registered. The
second is that the deeds of trust themselves do not speak of
the corpus of the properties being held in trust. Clause 3
of the 1947 deed only stipulates that the income from the
properties will be the income of the trust. A little later
also the deed proceeds to set out the "properties the income
from which will be used for the purposes of the trust". In
other words, the deed only records the assessee’s desire to
utilise the income for the objects mentioned in the deed and
not for his personal benefit. The document of 1960 does not
improve matters any further. So, it is said no valid trust
has been created by the assessee to merit the claim for
exemption.
We are of the opinion that the view of the High Court
proceeds on an unduly narrow construction of the deeds of
1947, and 1960. We have pointed out that, under the deed of
1947 the karta of the assessee family is the sole trustee to
execute the objects of the trust. It appears to have been
overlooked that while a registered conveyance to the
trustees by the owner of immovable property is necessary
where the trustees are persons other than the author, this
requirement does not arise where the author of the trust is
to be the sole trustee. While a trust is not complete until
the trust property is vested in trustees for the benefit of
the cestui que trust, this can be done by the settlor, where
he is
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himself the trustee, by a declaration of trust, using
language which, taken in connection with his acts, shows a
clear intention on his part to divest himself of all
beneficial interest in it and to exercise dominion and
control over it exclusively in the character of a trustee.
Sec.6 of the Indian Trusts Act, makes this clear beyond all
doubt. In the present case there is a deed which makes clear
the unequivocal intention to utilise the income from the
properties in the manner set out in the deed of trust. It is
in the context of the above legal position that one has to
understand the references in the trust deed to the income of
the properties belonging to the trust. Indeed, this is made
clear by the conduct of the party all through and the
language of the second deed. The assessee’s full ownership
of, and unqualified right to enjoy, the properties gets
restricted and qualified on the execution of such a trust
deed by the various conditions set out and imposed by the
trust deed. The execution of the trust deed creates an
overriding title in the beneficiaries thereunder (viz. the
various cross sections of the public covered by it) to
require that the income from the properties, which are made
the subject matter of the trust, be utilised in the manner
set out therein and no other. Indeed, after the execution of
the trust deed, the properties are no longer held by the
assessee as the absolute owner thereof; they are held by the
assessee under trust and legal obligation to apply the
income exclusively for charitable purposes, thus attracting
the provisions for exemption contained in the Act.
For the reasons discussed above, we are inclined to
take the view that the deed of 1947 should be construed as a
valid trust which has the effect of diverting the income at
the source and that the income thereafter has ceased to be
the income of the assessee-family. We therefore answer the
question referred to the High Court on this issue in favour
of the assessee.
In the result of C.A. 1427/-8/75 are allowed and the
other two civil appeals are allowed in part. There will,
however, be no order regarding costs.
R.N.J. C.A.1427-28/75 allowed.
C.A.1426/75 & 1653/91.
partly allowed.
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