Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
INCOME-TAX OFFICER, AWARD, LUCKNOW
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BACHULAL KAPOOR
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
14/12/1965
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
SHAH, J.C.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1966 AIR 1148 1966 SCR (3) 68
CITATOR INFO :
D 1966 SC1536 (4)
ACT:
Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, (11 of 1922), s. 34-Hindu
undivided family-Partition-Members assessed separately-
Notice to reassess the family--If can be given.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent used to be assessed to income-tax as karta of
a Hindu undivided family. In a suit filed by members of his
family against the respondent a compromise decree was
passed. The Income-tax officer accepting the respondent’s
claim under s. 25A of the Income-tax Act that the family was
partitioned, assessed the members of the family as
individuals. Later the Income-tax Officer issued a notice
under s. 34 of the Act to the respondent as karta of the
Hindu undivided family requiring him to file a return for a
year in which the members had been assessed as individuals
on the ground that the respondent’s income had escaped
assessment. Thereupon the respondent. filed a writ petition
in the High Court for quashing the said notice. As the
assessment of the same income in the hands of the members of
the family for the same year was not set aside the High
Court held that the notice was invalid as the same income
could not be assessed again in the hands of the Hindu
undivided family by taking proceedings under s. 34 of the
Act. In appeal to this Court :
HELD: (i) The Income-tax Officer had jurisdiction to
initiate proceedings under s. 34 of the Act against the
respondent as the karta of the Hindu undivided family.
A Hindu undivided family is a separate unit of assessment.
It is a distinct assessable entity. It is a ’person’ within
its definition in the Act. It is liable to be assessed to
income-tax in respect of its income. A member of that Hindu
undivided family is not liable to pay any tax in respect of
any sum which he receives as a member of that family out of
the income of that family. If the said Hindu undivided
family has escaped assessment for any year the Income-tax
Officer, subject to the conditions laid down in s. 34(1) ’of
the Act, may issue a notice thereunder calling upon the said
Hindu undivided family to submit a return of its income for
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that year and proceed to assess it in terms thereof. It is
manifest from a combined leading of ss. 3, 14(1) & (2),
22(1) and 34(1) that the Income-tax Officer can issue a
notice to a Hindu undivided family under s. 34 of the Act
on the ground that it has escaped assessment. [72 F-H]
The exercise of the option by an Officer to do one or other
of the two alternatives(viz., to assess either the Hindu
undivided family or members thereof separately) assumes
knowledge on his part of the existence of thetwo
alternatives. If the case of the Revenue be true, the
Income-tax at the time he assessed the individual
members of the family had no knowledge that a united family
existed; he presumably proceeded on the basis that the said
family bad really ceased to exist tinder the terms of the
compromise decree. Ibis was, therefore, not a case of
election between two alternative units of assessment, but an
attempt to bring to tax the income of an assessable entity
which had escaped assessment. The apart, under s. 3 of the
Act, in the matter of assessment, there is no question of
any election between a Hindu undivided
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family and a member thereof in respect of the income of the
family. If a Hindu undivided family exists under s. 3 of
the Act the Income-tax Officer has to assess it in respect
of its income. Indeed, under s. 14(1) of the Act, any part
of the income received by its member cannot be assessed over
again, While s. 3 confers an option on the Income-tax offcer
to assess either the association of persons or the members
of the association individually, no such option is conferred
on him thereunder in the case of a Hindu undivided family,
and its existence excluder. the liability of its members in
respect of the income of the former received by the latter.
[74 C-F]
Commissioner of Income-tax, U.P. v. Kanpur Coal Syndicate,
(1964) 53 I.T.R. 225: [1964] 8 S.C.R. 85 distinguished.
If the assessment proceedings initiated under s. 34 of the
Act culminates in the assessment of the Hindu undivided
family appropriate adjustments have to be made by the
Income-tax Officer in respect of the tax realised by the
Revenue in respect of the part of the income of the family
assessed on the individuals of the said family. TO do so is
not to open the final orders of assessment, but in reality
to arrive at the correct figure of tax payable by the Hindu
undivided family. [75 C-D] Case law referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 638 of 1961.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
December 15, 1960 of the Allahabad High Court (Lucknow
Bench) at Lucknow in Writ Petition No. 86 of 1960.
A.V. Viswanatha Sastri, N. D. Karkhanis, R. H. Dhebar,
B.R.G.K. Achar and R. N. Sachthey, for the appellant.
C.P.Lal, for the respondent.
Mohan Behari Lal, for the intervener.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Subba Rao, J. This appeal by special leave arises out of the
order of the High Court of Judicature at Allababad quashing
the notice issued by the appellant under S. 34 of the Indian
Income-tax Act, 1922, hereinafter called the Act, to the
respondent as the karta of a Hindu undivided family for the
assessment year 1955-56.
The facts may be briefly stated. Up to the assessment year
1952-53, the respondent, Bachulal Kapoor, was assessed to
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income-tax as karta of the Hindu undivided family consisting
of himself, his wife and a minor son. In a suit filed by
the wife and the son of Bachulal Kapoor against him, a
compromise was effected between the parties and on October
20, 1952, a compromise decree was passed. On January 18,
1954, the Incometax Officer, A-Ward, Lucknow, passed an
order accepting the
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claim under s. 25-A by the respondent that the family was
partitioned. For the assessment years 1953-54, 1954-55 and
1955-56, the members of the family were assessed as
individuals. On March 24, 1960, the Income-tax Officer
issued a notice under S. 34 of the Act to the respondent as
the karta of the Hindu undivided family requiring him to
file a return within the prescribed time of his world income
on the ground that the respondent’s income chargeable to
tax for the assessment year 1955-56 had escaped assessment
and also was under-assessed. Thereupon, the respondent
moved the High Court at Allahabad under Art. 226 of the
Constitution for quashing the said notice on two grounds,
namely, (i) the income in respect of which the return had
been called for had already been assessed in the hands of
the individual members of the family and, therefore, the
said income could not be assessed undivided family had
ceased to exist, that the partition of the family was
recognised by the Income-tax Officer under s. 25-A of the
Act, and, therefore, no valid notice could be issued to the
respondent in his capacity as the karta of the Hindu
undivided family. On an admission made by the learned
counsel for the Revenue, the notice, so far as it related to
the reassessment of the income on the ground of under-
assessment, was ignored as it was inconsistent with the
alternative ground of escaped assessment. The High Court
held that the said notice was invalid as it offended the
principle against double taxation. As the assessment of the
same income in the hands of the members of the family for
the same year was not set aside, the High Court held that
the same income could not be assessed again in the hands of
the Hindu undivided family by taking proceedings under s. 34
of the Act. In that view, it thought that it was not
necessary to go into the second ground, namely, whether the
proceedings under S. 34 of the Act could have been validly
taken in view of the orders passed under s. 25-A of the Act.
Pursuant to the view expressed on the first question, the
said notice was quashed. Hence the appeal.
The 4th respondent in Civil Appeals Nos. 805 and 806 of 1962
filed Civil Miscellaneous Petition No. 2655 of 1965 praying
for permission to intervene in the present appeal on the
ground that a common question arose in the said appeals as
well as in the present appeal and it was ordered.
Mr. A. V. Viswanatha Sastri, learned counsel for the
Revenue, contended that under the Act a Hindu undivided
family and the individuals thereof were different assessable
entities; that, as the
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alleged compromise decree was a collusive one the said Hindu
undivided family continued to exist as a separate entity;
that it had escaped assessment; and that, therefore, subject
to the conditions laid down in s. 34 of the Act, the Income-
tax Officer was within his rights to issue a notice
thereunder.
The argument of Mr. C. P. Lal, learned counsel for the res-
pondent, may be put thus : the Income-tax Officer had
assessed the same income assessable for the year 1955-56 in
the hands of the individual members of the family and the
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assessments made on them had become final. Having elected
to assess the individuals as separate entities, the Income-
tax Officer had no jurisdiction under the Act to assess the
same income in the hands of a separate assessable entity,
namely, the Hindu undivided family. He also relied upon the
principle of avoidance of double taxation alleged to
underlie the scheme of the Act in respect of the same
income..
On the question argued before us, the following provisions
of the Act will be relevant:
"Section 3. Where any Central Act enacts that
income-tax shall be charged for any year at
any rate or rates, tax at that rate or those
rates shall be charged for that year in
accordance with, and subject to the provisions
of, this Act in respect of the total income of
the previous year of every individual, Hindu
undivided family, company, and local
authority, and of every firm and other
association of persons or the partners of the
firm or the members of the association
individually.
Section 14. (1). The tax shall not be payable
by an assessee in respect of any sum which he
receives as a member of a Hindu undivided
family where such sum has been paid out of the
income of the family.........
Section 2. (9) "person" includes a Hindu
undivided family and a local authority.
Section 22. (1) The Income-tax Officer shall,
on or before the 1st day of May in each year,
give notice, by publication in the press and
by publication in the prescribed manner,
requiring every person whose total income
during the previous year exceeded the maximum
amount which is not chargeable to income-tax
to furnish, within such period not being less
than sixty days as may be specified in the
notice, a return in the prescribed form and
verified in the prescribed manner,
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setting forth (along with such other
particulars as may be required by the, notice)
his total income and total world income during
that year.
Section 34. (1) If-
(a) the Income-tax Officer has reason to
believe that by reason of the omission or
failure on the part of an assessee to make a
return of his income under section 22 for any
year or to disclose fully and truly all
material facts necessary for his assessment
for that year, income, profits or gains
chargeable to income-tax have escaped
assessment for that year, or have been under-
assessed at too low a rate, or have been made
the subject of excessive relief under the Act,
or excessive loss or depreciation allowance
has been computed................. he may in
cases falling under clause (a) at any time
:......... serve on the assessee, or, if the
assessee is a company, on the principal
officer thereof, a notice containing all or
any of the requirements which may be included
in a notice under sub-section (2) of section
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22 and may proceed to assess or reassess such
income, profits or gains or recompute the loss
or depreciation allowance; and the provisions
of this Act shall, so far as may be, apply
accordingly as if the notice were a notice
issued under that sub-section
The gist of the said provisions may be given thus: A Hindu
undivided family is a separate unit of assessment. It is a
distinct assessable entity. It is a "person" within its
definition in the Act. It is liable to be assessed to
income-tax in respect of its income. A member of that Hindu
undivided family is not liable to pay any tax in respect of
any sum which he receives as a member of that family out of
the income of that family. If the said Hindu undivided
family has escaped assessment for any year, the Income-tax
Officer, subject to the conditions laid down in s. 34(1) of
the Act, may issue a notice thereunder calling upon the said
Hindu undivided family to submit a return of its income for
that year and proceed to assess it in terms thereof. It is
manifest from a combined reading of the said provisions that
the Income-tax Officer can issue a notice to a Hindu
undivided family under s. 34 of the Act on the ground
that it has escaped assessment.
The impugned notice under s. 34(1) of the Act issued to the
respondent reads thus
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"Whereas I have reason to believe that your
income assessable to income-tax for the
assessment year 19.55-56 has
(a) escaped assessment,
(b) been under-assessed,
1, therefore, propose to reassess the said
income that has
(a) escaped assessment, (b) been under-
assessed.
I hereby require you to deliver to me not
later than30th March, 1960, or within 35 days
of the receipt of this notice, a return in the
attached form of your total income and total
world income assessable for the said year
ending 31st March 1956."
In the counter-affidavit filed by the Income-tax Officer in
the High Court it was stated that he had reason to believe,
in consequence of information in his possession, that
income, profits or gains chargeable to income-tax had
escaped assessment. His information was that
notwithstanding the compromise decree the members of the
family were living together, had joint mess and the business
was run by the respondent. In short, the case of the
Revenue was that the compromise was a make-believe one and
the family in fact continued to be a joint Hindu family. If
the case of the Revenue was true-on which we do not express
any opinion and the fact of the continuance of the joint
Hindu family was kept back from the knowledge of the Income-
tax Officer, it would be a clear case of the said family
escaping assessment during the relevant year. If that be
so, s. 34(1) would immediately be attracted and the notice
issued would be good. But, it was contended that under s. 3
of the Act, the Income-tax Officer had the option to assess
either the Hindu undivided family or the members thereof
separately and that, as the said Officer, in exercise of the
option, had assessed the individual members of the family,
he had no longer any jurisdiction to assess the Hindu
undivided family. In support of that contention reliance
was placed on a decision of this Court in Commissioner of
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Income-tax, U.P. v. Kanpur Coal Syndicate(1). Therein,
construing s. 3 of the Act, this Court observed
"The section expressly treats an association
of persons and the individual members of an
association as two distinct and different
assessable entities. On the terms of the
section the tax can be levied on either of
(1) (1964) 53 I.T.R. 225, 228:r 1964] 8
S.C.R. 85.
p. Cl/66-7
74
the said two entities according to the
provisions of the Act. There is no scope for
the argument that under section 3 the
assessment shall be only on the association of
persons as a unit though after such assessment
the share of the income of a member of that
association may be added to the other income
under section 14(2) of the Act. This
construction would make the last words of the
section viz-., "members of the, association
individually", a surplusage."
But, these observations in the context of the present case
have no bearing. The exercise of the option to do one or
other of the two alternatives open to an Officer assumes
knowledge on his part of the existance of two alternatives.
If the case of the Revenue be true, the Income-tax Officer
at the time he assessed the individual members or-the family
had no knowledge that a united joint family existed; he
presumably proceeded on the basis that the said family had
really ceased to exist under the terms of the, compromise
decree. This is, therefore, not a case of election between
two alternative units of assessment, but an attempt to bring
to tax the income of an assessable entity which had escaped
assessment. That apart, under s. 3 of the Act, in the
matter of assessment, there is no question of any election
between a Hindu undivided family and a member thereof in
respect of the income of the family. If a Hindu undivided
family exists, under s. 3 of the Act the Income-tax Officer
has to assess it in respect of its income. Indeed, tinder
s. 14(1) of the Act, any part of the income received by its
members cannot be assessed over again. While s. 3 confers
an option on the Income-tax Officer to assess either the
association of persons or the members of the association
individually, no such option is conferred on him thereunder
in the case of a Hindu undivided family, as its existence
excludes the liability of its members in respect of the
income of the former received by the latter.
It was then forcibly brought to our notice that the said
view would be subversive of the doctrine of "double
taxation". It was said that as the orders of assessment on
the individual members of the said family had become final,
if the Income-tax Officer was permitted to assess the Hindu
undivided family for the same assessment year, tax would be
imposed on the same income twice over. It is true that the
Act does not envisage taxation of the same income twice over
"on one passage of money in the form of one sort of income".
It is equally true that s. 14(1) of the Act expressly debars
the imposition of tax on any part of
75
the income of a Hindu undivided family received by its
members. The fact that there is no provision in the Act
dealing with a converse position does not affect the
question, for the existence of such a converse position is
legally impossible under the Act. So long as the Hindu
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undivided family exists, the individuals thereof cannot
separately be assessed in respect of its income.
Nonetheless, if, under some mistake, such income was
assessed to tax in the hands of the individual members,
which should not have been done, when a proper assessment
was made on the Hindu undivided family in respect of that
income, the Revenue had to make appropriate adjustments;
otherwise, the assessment made in respect of that income on
the Hindu undivided family would be contrary to the
provisions of the Act, particularly s. 14(1) of the Act.
We, therefore, bold that if the assessment proceedings
initiated under s. 34 of the Act culminates in the
assessment of the Hindu undivided family, appropriate
adjustments have to be made by the Income-tax Officer in
respect of the tax realised by the Revenue in respect of
that part of the income of the family assessed on the
individuals of the said family. To do so is not to reopen
the final orders of assessment, but in reality to arrive at
the correct figure of tax payable by the Hindu undivided
family.
The decisions, except one, cited at the Bar do not speak in
a: different voice : they are consistent with the view
expressed by us.
The Lahore High Court in Jaikishan Das v. Commissioner of
Income-tax, Lahore(1) ruled that the provisions of s. 34 of
the Income-tax Act could not be rendered inapplicable merely
because, income which was alleged to have escaped from the
assessment of a particular person was included in the income
of another person. The Allahabad High Court in Joti Prasad
Agarwal v. Income-tax Officer, B Ward, Mathura(2) held that
once the income of an association of members was charged to
income-tax in the hands, of the members individually and
assessments of the members remained valid assessments, there
could be no fresh assessment of the income in the hands of
the association. That conclusion was arrived at on a
construction of s. 3 of the Act. Therein, Bhargava, J.,
speaking for the Court, observed:
assessed and charged to tax in the hands of
the members of the association individually
under one of the alternatives provided under
section 3 of the Income-tax
Act.....................
(1) (1951) 20 I.T.R. 540
(2) (1959) 371T.C.R. 107, 111,
76
Section 3 of the Act, which is the main
charging section, only talks of charging the
income of certain persons and does not talk of
income-tax being charged on persons. This
implies that the charge is to be levied on an
income only once. Whether it is to be charged
in the hands of one person or another can
certainly be determined under section 3 and
other relevant provisions of the Incometax
Act. Section 3 is clear enough to indicate,
that the same income cannot be charged
repeatedly in the hands of different persons
or in the hands of the same person."
In that case there was no question of suppression of the
fact of the existence of an association of persons when the
members were individually assessed. The decision proceeded
mainly on the basis of the exercise of the option conferred
on the Incometax Officer under s. 3 of the Act to assess an
association of members or the members individually and that
if once the option was exercised and the income was
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assessed in the hands of the members, it was held that in
regard to the same income the association of members could
not be assessed. Where the Income-tax Officer first
assessed a partnership firm but later on issued a notice
under s. 34 of the Act for assessing the alleged partners of
the firm as constituting an association of persons, the
Allahabad High Court in Moti Chandra v. Income-tax Officer,-
District III(ii), Kanpur(1), held that the Income-tax
Officer had jurisdiction to do so. Therein, Upadhya, J.,
adverting to Joti Prasad Agarwal’s case(2) said :
"The decision is wholly inapplicable to the
case in hand. Here the assessment was never
made either on members of the association or
on the association itself. It had been made
on certain persons who claimed to be the
partners of the firm Messrs. Rup Narain Ram
Chandra. The Income-tax Officer now wants to
assess the association of persons which was
not assessed tax at all. Even the income of
the members of the association had not been
subjected to tax in their hands. Section 3
therefore provides no bar to such assessment."
This is a case of an assessable entity,
namely, as association of persons, escaping
assessment, though the same income was
assessed in the hands of the firm.
(1) A.I.R. 1962 Allahabad 291, at 298 (2) (1959) 37
I.T.R. 107, 111
77
In S. Gyani Ram and Co. v. Income-tax Officer, A. Ward,
Firozabad(1), when the Income-tax Officer assessed a person
to tax on a certain income and later on for the same income
proposed to take action under s. 34 of the Act against
another person, the Allahabad High Court held that action
under a. 34 of the Act could be initiated against him in
respect of the same income previously taxed on the ground
that it had escaped assessment in his hands.
These cases, except Joti Prasad Agarwal’s case(1) accept the
principle that the Income-tax Officer has jurisdiction to
initiate, proceedings under s. 34 of the Act, if the
conditions laid down therein are complied with, against a
person on the ground that the income, though it has been
assessed in the hands of another, has escaped assessment in
his hands. They do not deal with the connected question,
how the adjustments will have to be made to avoid double
taxation of the same income. The only question that arises
at the time the Income-tax Officer proposes to take
proceedings under s. 34 of the Act is, whether the income
has escaped assessment or has been under-assessed in the
hands of the person against whom the said proceedings are
’initiated. At that stage, the question of resolving the
conflict between the proposed assessment and an earlier
assessment made on a wrong person does not arise.
Some argument was advanced on the question of the validity
of what are called "protective or precautional assessments".
Reference was made to Jagannath Hanumanbux v. Income-tax
Officer(3) and to the decision of this Court in Lalji
Haridas v. Income-tax Officer(,’). In the former, the
validity of protective assessment was approved; and in the
latter, this Court, though the question of assessment was
raised, did not express its final opinion thereon. This
Court held that when there was a doubt as to which person
among two was liable to be assessed, parallel proceedings
might be started against both; and it also laid down an
equitable procedure to be followed in that situation. In
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this case, the question of protective assessment does not
call for our decision and we do not express our opinion
thereon.
We, therefore, hold that the High Court went wrong in
holding that the Income-tax Officer had no jurisdiction to
initiate proceedings under s. 34 of the Act against the
respondent as the karta of a Hindu undivided family.
(1) (1963) 47 I.T.R. 472 (2) (1959) 37 I.T.R. 107
(3) (1957) 31 I.T.R. 603 (4) (1961) 43 I.T.R. 387
78
The High Court, as we have indicated earlier, has not
expressed its opinion on the question based upon S. 25-A ’of
the Act. In the result, the, order of the High Court is set
aside and the appeal is remanded to the High Court for
disposal in accordance with law. The costs of this appeal
will abide the result.
Appeal remanded.
79