Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
CONTROLLER OF ESTATE DUTY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
KAMLAVATI AND SHRI JAI GOPAL MEHRA
DATE OF JUDGMENT05/09/1979
BENCH:
UNTWALIA, N.L.
BENCH:
UNTWALIA, N.L.
PATHAK, R.S.
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
CITATION:
1980 AIR 142 1980 SCR (1) 527
1979 SCC (4) 262
CITATOR INFO :
F 1986 SC 631 (5,14)
D 1987 SC 785 (22)
APR 1988 SC1426 (16)
ACT:
Estate Duty Act, s. 10-Scope of-Deceased gifted money
to son-Son became partner of the firm in which donor
continued to be partner-Gift-Whether dutiable on the death
of father.
HEADNOTE:
The deceased was a partner in a partnership firm with a
half share in it. On March 27, 1957 he made a gift of Rs.
1,00,000/- to his son and Rs. 50,000/-to his wife, the
respondent. Almost simultaneously his son was taken as a
partner by giving him half share of the deceased, so that
from that time onwards there were four partners of whom the
deceased and his son had 1/4 share each. On the death of the
deceased in 1962 his 4/1 share was taken by his wife and son
equally.
The Revenue Authorities included the sum of Rs.
1,50,000/ in the estate of the deceased for the purposes of
estate duty. On appeal the Tribunal was of the view that s.
10 of the Estate Duty Act was not attracted to the gifts.
The High Court answered the reference in favour of the
assessee.
Dismissing the Revenue’s appeal
^
HELD: The Tribunal as well as the High Court was right
in holding that no estate duty was payable in respect of the
two sums. [537B]
1. When property is gifted by a donor, possession and
enjoyment of which is allowed in a partnership firm in which
the donor was a partner, the mere fact that the donor was
sharing the enjoyment or benefit in the property is not
sufficient for the application of s. 10 of the Act unless
such enjoyment or benefit is clearly referable to the gift.
If possession, enjoyment or benefit of the donor in the
property is consistent with the facts and circumstances of
the case, other than those of the factum of gift, then it
cannot be said that the donee had not retained possession
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and enjoyment of the property to the entire exclusion of the
donor, or, to the entire exclusion of the donor in any
benefit to him by contract or otherwise. It makes no
difference whether the donee is a partner in the firm from
before or is taken as such at the time of the gift or he
becomes a creditor of the partnership firm by allowing the
firm to make use of the gifted property for the purposes of
the partnership. [535G-H]
(a) Although in a given case the donee assumes bona
fide possession and enjoyment of the property immediately
upon the gift to the entire exclusion of the donor, if the
donee thenceforth does not retain it to the entire exclusion
of the donor the gift is dutiable. In Chick’s case the gift
was without reservation and qualification and the sons
assumed and enjoyed the property to the exclusion of the
father. Yet a few years later when the donor-father and the
donees entered into partnership, each partner’s property,
including the one gifted by
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the father, was made available as the capital of the
business and property of the partnership. Each of the
partners was in possession and enjoyment of the property and
allowed the others to derive benefit out of the property
gifted, so long as the partnership subsisted. The gift was,
therefore, dutiable. In Munro’s case on the other hand the
gift was of a property shorn of certain of the rights which
appertain to complete ownership and after the gift the donor
had remained in possession and enjoyment of those rights
which were not the subject matter of the gift. The gift was,
therefore, not dutiable.
[531 E-H]
(b)Interpreting s. 10 of the Estate Duty Act (before
the second proviso was added) this Court held in Da Costa’s
case that the donor-father who stayed with his sons in the
house till his death after the house was gifted to them, the
donor had not been entirely excluded from possession and
enjoyment of the gifted property and, therefore, s. 10 was
attracted. It was further held that the expression "by
contract or otherwise" in second limb of the section did not
control the words "to the entire exclusion of the donor" in
the first limb.
[533A-B]
(c) In Gounder’s case the donor who was a partner of a
firm gifted to his two sons house property which was under
the occupation of the firm as a tenant at will and the firm
thereafter paid rent to the donees. In addition, a sum of
Rs. 1 lakh transferred by the donor in the firm’s books of
account and credited to the accounts of the donor’s five
sons, remained invested with the firm on which the firm paid
interest to the sons. This Court applying the rule in
Munro’s case held that what was gifted by the donor was the
whole of the property minus the rights of the partnership
which were shared and enjoyed by the donor as well. The
donor was enjoying that bundle of rights in the partnership
which he was enjoying before the gift and this did not bring
the case within the ambit of s. 10. In the case of the house
property the possession which the donor could give was the
legal possession. The benefit which the donor had as a
member of the partnership was not the benefit referable in
any way to the gift but is unconnected therewith.
[534E-
F]
(d) But in Gounder’s case the implicit departure from
Chick’s case was when it was said that the benefit the donor
had received as a member of the partnership was not a
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benefit referable in any way to the gift but is unconnected
therewith. This departure can be attributable to the very
subtle distinction in the facts of the two cases : whereas
in Chick’s case the donor as a partner came to share
possession and enjoyment of the property by the partnership
firm long after the gift, in Gounder’s case the benefit
which the donor was enjoying as a partner in the property
gifted was existing at the time of the gift itself and
continued to exist even thereafter. It was not exactly on
the basis of Munro’s case that it was said so.
[534G]
(e) Where the gift of money was in a partnership firm
in which the donor was a partner and the donees were taken
as partners it was held that the benefit in the property
viz. the money gifted which the donees were enjoying and
continued to enjoy as partners was not sufficient to bring
the case within the ambit of s. 10 irrespective of the
question whether that benefit was referable to the gift or
not. In other words if the benefit was referable to the gift
then the property would be covered by s. 10, otherwise not.
[535A-B]
529
(f) In Controller of Estate Duty v. R. V. Viswanathan &
Ors. the transfer of the gifted sums was made subject to
the condition that the sons would use them as capital, not
for any benefit of the deceased donor, but for each of them
becoming entitled to 1/7th share in the business. The fact
that the partnership may make use of the sums of money
gifted in which the donor also was a partner did not mean
that he was allowed to enjoy or derive any benefit in the
money gifted which could be referable to the gift itself.
[535D-E]
2. (a) Where the sums gifted by the donor were invested
in the firm in which the donor was a partner, the donees
remained creditors of the firm. The rule in Munro’s is
applicable. [537G]
(b) If a firm borrows money so as to be itself liable
for it to the lender the capital of the firm is no more
increased than is the capital of an ordinary individual is
increased by his getting into debt. The capital of a
partnership is not, therefore, the same as its property even
treating it as the partnership property. The partnership
property does not belong to a co-partner in the sense of his
being a co-owner. The partnership firm is not a legal entity
in the sense of having a legal personality of its own,
different from that of the partners. But no partner can
claim a share in the partnership property according to his
share in the partnership. A creditor of the partnership is
entitled to get back the whole of his property on
dissolution of the firm or otherwise, while a partner is
entitled to get a share in the net assets of the property
realised on the winding up of the partnership. [536C-E]
Clifford John Chick and Another v. Commissioner of
Stamp Duty 37 I.T.R. 89 (ED), Munro v. Commissioner of Stamp
Duties [1934] Appeal Cases 61, George Da Costa v. Controller
of Estate Duty, Mysore 63 I.T.R 497=[1967] 1 S.C.R. 1004,
Controller of Estate Duty, Madras v. C. R. Ramachandra
Gounder 88 I.T.R. 448=[1975] 3 S.C.R. 554, Commissioner of
Income Tax and Controller of Estate Duty, Madras v. N. R.
Ramarathnam and Others; 91 I.T.R. 1=[1974] 1 S.C.R. 372,
Controller of Estate Duty, Kerala v. R. V. Viswanathan and
Others, 105 I.T.R. 653 explained.
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal Nos. 2527
and 2528 of 1972.
From the Judgment and Order dated 10-3-1971 of the
Punjab and Haryana High Court in Income Tax Reference No.
12/68 and 5/69.
S. T. Desai, S. P. Nayar and Miss A. Subhashini for the
Appellant in both the appeals.
Bhagirath Das, B. P. Maheshwari and Suresh Seth for the
Respondent in CA No. 2528/72.
Ex-parte against respondents in C.A. 2527/72.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
UNTWALLA J. These two appeals by certificate filed by
the Controller of Estate Duty are from the Judgments of the
Punjab & Haryana High Court. Both the appeals have been
heard together as a common
530
question of law is involved in them. It relates to the
interpretation and applicability of Section 10 of the Etate
Duty Act, 1953, hereinafter called the Act.
We shall first proceed to state the facts and discuss
the law in Civil Appeal 2527 of 1972. Even though the
respondent, Smt. Kamlavati, was not represented in this
appeal, Mr. S. T. Desai, learned counsel for the appellant,
assisted the court very ably and fairly. In the other
appeal, being Civil Appeal 2528 of 1972, Shri Jai Gopal
Mehra, the respondent, was represented by Mr. Bhagirathi
Das. The main judgment of the Full Bench of High Court is in
this Civil Appeal, and it has followed the ratio of this
decision in the other appeal also. We, however, find it
convenient to first discuss the question of law with
reference to the facts of Civil Appeal 2527 of 1972.
Maharaj Mal, the deceased, with whose estate we are
concerned in this appeal, was a partner in a partnership
firm styled as M/s Maharaj Mal Hans Raj. Mahraj Mal had a
half share in the partnership. The other two partners namely
Jialal and Hansraj had each 1/4th share. On the 27th March,
1957 Maharaj Mal made a gift of Rs. 1,00,000 to his son,
Lalit Kumar, and of Rs. 50,000 to his wife, Kamlavati. In
the books of the partnership firm the sums of Rs. 1,50,000
were debited in the account of Maharaj Mal and credited to
the accounts of Lalit Kumar and Kamlavati, Rs. 1,00,000 in
the name of Lalit Kumar and Rs. 50,000 in the name of
Kamlavati. Almost simultaneously with effect from 28th
March, 1957 as per the instrument of partnership dated the
2nd April, 1957 Lalit Kumar was taken as a partner in the
firm of M/s Maharaj Mal Hans Raj by giving him 1/4th share
out of the half share of Maharaj Mal. In other words, with
effect from the said date there were four partners in the
firm each holding 1/4th share.
On the 17th December, 1957, Hans Raj died and in his
place his widow Smt. Rup Rani was taken as a partner in the
firm getting 1/4th share, the share of her husband. Maharaj
Mal died on the 9th January, 1962. On his death the firm was
again reconstituted with Jialal and Rup Rani each retaining
1/4th share, Lalit Kumar getting 3/8th share, i.e., 1/4th
his own share augmented by half of 1/4th share of deceased
Maharaj Mal. The remaining half of Maharaj Mal’s share i.e,
1/8th was given to Kamlavati.
The Revenue Authorities relying upon the judgment of
the Privy Council in the case of Clifford John Chick and
Another v. Commissioner of Stamp Duty(1) as also the
judgment of the Calcutta High
531
Court in the case of Rash Mohan Chatterjee v. Controller of
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Estate Duty, West Bengal(1), held that the said sums of Rs.
1,50,000 were includible for the purposes of the estate
duty. The accountable person took the matter in further
appeal before the Appellate Tribunal, which took the view
that the provisions of Section 10 of the Act were not
attracted to the two amounts of gifts made by the deceased
to his wife and son and, therefore, the accountable persons
were not liable to pay any estate duty on them. The Tribunal
on being asked by the revenue made a reference to the High
Court under Section 64(1) of the Act and referred the
following question of law for its opinion:-
"Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of
the case, the provisions of section 10 of Estate Duty
Act did apply to the gifts of Rs. 1,00,000 and of Rs.
50,000 made by the deceased to his son and wife
respectively ?"
On a consideration of the various authorities the High
Court has affirmed the view of the Tribunal and hence the
appeal.
Although Section 10 of the Act came up for
consideration of this Court in many cases wherein several
English decisions were reviewed and the law was laid down as
precisely as was possible to be done on the facts of each
case, in the application of the principles, Courts are still
faced with difficulty resulting in some cleavage of opinion.
We, therefore, think it necessary to review some of those
cases over again.
In the case of Clifford John Chick (supra) the question
for consideration before the Judicial Committee of the Privy
Council related to the interpretation and applicability of
Section 102 of the New South Wales Stamp Duties Act, which
was in pari materia with Section 10 of our Act. In 1934
father of Clifford John Chick transferred by way of gift to
his son the property in question. The gift was made without
reservation or qualification or condition. In 1935, the
deceased, his son Clifford John Chick and another son
entered into an agreement to carry on in partnership the
business of graziers and stock dealers. The agreement
provided, inter alia, that the father should be the manager
of the business and that his decision should be final and
conclusive in connection with all matters relating to its
conduct. Each partner’s property including the one gifted
was made available as the capital of the business and
property of the partnership. The partnership continued for
quite a good number of years until the donor died in 1952.
In such a situation the Privy Council held that although the
first part of sub-section 2(d) of Section 102 had been
satisfied in that the son had assumed bona fide possession
and enjoyment of the
532
property immediately upon the gift to the entire exclusion
of the father, he had not thenceforth retained it to the
father’s entire exclusion, for under the partnership
agreement, the partners and each of them were in possession
and enjoyment of the property so long as the partnership
subsisted. Viscount Simonds delivering the opinion of the
Board distinguished an earlier decision of the Privy Council
in Munro v. Commissioner of Stamp Duties(1) on the ground
that in Munro’s case the gift was of a property shorn of
certain of the rights which appertain to complete ownership
and after the gift the donor had remained in possession and
enjoyment of those rights and of no other right which was
the subject matter of the gift. To start with, therefore,
the ratio in Chick’s case is that if the donor is allowed to
be in possession and enjoyment of or derive any benefit out
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of the property gifted then Section 10 of the Act will make
such property, dutiable. If, on the other hand, the donor’s
possession, enjoyment or benefit is not relatable to the
property gifted but to something outside it then no estate
duty is chargeable in respect of such property.
Section 10 came up for consideration before this Court
in the case of George Da Costa v. Controller of Estate Duty,
Mysore(2). The said decision was given in respect of a
period when the second proviso to Section 10 was not in the
Act as the same was introduced by Central Act 10 of 1965
with effect from 1-4-1965. This was a clear case where the
donor had been allowed to stay-in the gifted house till his
death even after the house was gifted to his sons. Ramaswami
J. delivering the judgment on behalf of the Court analysed
Section 10 with reference to some other provisions of the
Act and said at page 501:-
"The crux of the section lies in two parts: (1)
the donee must bona fide have assumed possession and
enjoyment of the property, which is the subject-matter
of the gift, to the exclusion of the donor, immediately
upon the gift, and (2) the donee must have retained
such possession and enjoyment of the property to the
entire exclusion of the donor or of any benefit to him,
by contract or otherwise. As a matter of construction
we are of opinion that both these conditions are
cumulative. Unless each of these conditions is
satisfied, the property would be liable to estate duty
under section 10 of the Act."
The learned Judge further pointed out that the "second part
of the section has two limbs: the deceased must be entirely
excluded, (i)
533
from the property, and (ii) from any benefit by contract or
otherwise, the word ’otherwise’ to be construed ejusdem
generis." But it would be noticed that in the opinion of the
Court the case of the Revenue rightly rested upon the first
limb as the deceased had not been entirely excluded from the
possession and enjoyment of the property gifted. The
expression "by contract or otherwise", occurring in the
second limb of the section did not control the words "to the
entire exclusion of the donor" in the first limb.
In the case of Controller of Estate Duty, Madras v. C.
R. Ramachandra Gounder(1) the donor who was a partner in a
firm owned a property which the firm was occupying as
tenant-at-will. He executed a deed of settlement under which
he transferred the property leased out to the firm to his
two sons. But the firm continued to be in occupation of the
premises paying rent to the donees after the deed of
settlement. The deceased had further directed the firm to
transfer from his account a sum of Rs. 20,000 to the credit
of each of his five sons in the firm’s books with effect
from April 1, 1953. In the account of each of the sons, the
sum of Rs. 20,000 gifted to him was credited. The amounts
remained invested with the firm on which interest was paid
to the sons. The deceased continued to be a partner of the
firm till April 13, 1957, when the firm was dissolved and
thereafter he died on May 5, 1957. The question was whether
the value of the house property and the sum of Rs. 1,00,000
could be included in the principal value of the estate of
the deceased as property deemed to pass under Section 10 of
the Act. This Court held that no estate duty was liable to
be charged on either of the properties. The main principle
is discussed with reference to the house property and
approving the decision of the Mysore High Court in the case
of Controller of Estate Duty v. Aswathanarayana Setty(2) the
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same principle was applied with reference to the sum of Rs.
1,00,000 also. The ratio in Munro’s case as also in another
decision of the Privy Council in Commissioner of Stamp
Duties of New South Wales v. Perpectual Trustee Co. Ltd.(3)
was applied and it was held:-
"The donor could, therefore, only transfer
possession of the property which the nature of that
property was capable of, which in this case is subject
to the tenancy. He could do nothing else to transfer
the possession in any other
534
manner unless he was required to effectuate the gift
for the purpose of section 10 of the Act by getting the
firm to vacate the premises and handing over possession
of the same to the donees leaving the donees thereafter
to lease it out to the firm. Even then the objection of
the learned advocate that since the donor was a partner
in the firm which had taken the property on lease, he
derived benefit therefrom and was, therefore, not
entirely excluded from the possession and enjoyment
thereof, will nevertheless remain unsatisfied. To get
over such on objection, the donees will have to lease
out the property after getting possession from the firm
to some other person totally unconnected with the
donor. Such an unreasonable requirement the law does
not postulate. The possession which the donor can give
is the legal possession which the circumstances and the
nature of the property would admit. This he has given.
The benefit the donor had as a member of the
partnership was not a benefit referable in any way to
the gift but is unconnected therewith.
It should be noticed that, though not explicitly but
implicitly, some departure was made from the ratio of the
Privy Council case in Chick’s. When the principle of Munro’s
case was applied it was on the basis that what was gifted by
the donor was the whole of the property minus the rights of
the partnership which were shared and enjoyed by the donor
also; the donor enjoying the same bundle of rights in the
partnership which he was enjoying before the gift did not
bring the case within the ambit of section 10. But the
implicit departure from the Chick’s case was when it was
said that the benefit the donor had had as a member of the
partnership was not a benefit referable in any way to the
gift but is unconnected therewith. This departure can be
attributed to the very subtle distinction in the facts of
the two cases and it is necessary to highlight them. In
Chick’s case the donor as a partner came to share the
possession and enjoyment of the property by the partnership
firm long after the gift, while in Gounder’s the benefit
which the donor was enjoying as a partner in the property
gifted was existing at the time of the gift itself and
continued to exist even thereafter. It was not exactly on
the basis of Munro’s case that it was said so. Similar was
the view expressed by the Mysore High Court in Setty’s case
in relation to the gift of money in a partnership firm where
the donor was a partner and the sons, the donees, were also
taken as partners. Even then, it was pointed out that the
benefit in the property namely the money gifted which the
donor was enjoying and continued to enjoy as a partner was
not
535
sufficient to bring the case within the ambit of Section 10
irrespective of the question whether that benefit was
referable or not to the gift. In other words, if the benefit
was referable to the gift then the property would be covered
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by Section 10, otherwise not. The same Bench which decided
Gounder’s followed it in the case of Commissioner of Income-
tax and Controller of Estate Duty, Madras v. N. R.
Ramarathnam and Others(1). In this case the fact in relation
to the gifts of money by the donor in favour of his three
sons and the daughter were almost identical to those of
Gounder’s except that the three sons and daughter were also
partners in the firm. Yet applying the ratio in Gounder’s it
was held that the amounts gifted were not chargeable to
estate duty under section 10.
We may now refer to the decision of a Bench of this
Court to which one of us (Untwalia J.) was a party in the
case of Controller of Estate Duty, Kerala v. R. V.
Viswanathan and Others(2). The deceased was the sole
proprietor of the business. He gifted the sums of Rs.
2,70,000 to his four major and two minor sons each son
getting a sum of Rs. 45,000. The transfers were made by book
entries. It was held that there was no absolute transfer of
the sum of Rs. 2,70,000. It was a part of the scheme to
transfer 6/7th shares in the business in favour of the sons.
The transfer was made subject to the condition that the sons
would use it as capital not for any benefit of the deceased
donor but for each of them becoming entitled to 1/7th share
in the business. In other words, the mere fact that the
partnership may make use of the sums of money gifted in
which the donor also was a partner did not mean that he was
allowed to enjoy or drive any benefit in the money gifted,
which could be referable to the gift itself.
To avoid the conflict in the application of the ratio
of the various Supreme Court cases as seems to have been
done by some of the High Courts, we would like to clarify
and elucidate some of the aspects and facets of the matter a
bit further. When a property is gifted by a donor the
possession and enjoyment of which is allowed to a
partnership firm in which the donor is a partner, then the
mere fact of the donor sharing the enjoyment or the benefit
in the property is not sufficient for the application of
Section 10 of the Act until and unless such enjoyment or
benefit is clearly referable to the gift, i.e., to the
parting with such enjoyment or benefit by the donee or
permitting the donor to share them out of the bundle of
rights gifted in the property. If the possession, enjoyment
or benefit of the donor in the property
536
is consistent with the other facts and circumstances of the
case, other than those of the factum of gift, then it cannot
be said that the donee had not retained the possession and
enjoyment of the property to the entire exclusion of the
donor, or, to the entire exclusion of the donor in any
benefit to him by contract or otherwise. It makes no
difference whether the donee is a partner in the firm from
before or is taken as such at the time of the gift or he
becomes a creditor of the partnership firm by allowing it to
make use of the gifted property for the purposes of the
partnership. It should be remembered as pointed out by
Lindley on Partnership Twelfth Edition at page 178:-"If a
firm borrows money so as to be itself liable for it to the
lender, the capital of the firm is no more increased than is
the capital of an ordinary individual increased by his
getting into debt." Although as pointed out at page 357 "The
capital of a partnership is not therefore the same as its
property," even treating it as the partnership property, the
partnership property does not belong to a co-partner in the
sense of his being a co-owner. The partnership firm is not a
legal entity in the sense of having a legal personality of
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its own different from that of the partners. But no partner
can claim a share in the partnership property according to
his share in the partnership. A creditor of the partnership
is entitled to get back the whole of his property on
dissolution of the firm or otherwise, while a partner is
entitled to get a share in the net assets of the property
realized on the winding up of the partnership.
Mr. Desai heavily relied upon the decision of the
Gujarat High Court in the case of Sekarlal Chunilal and
Others v. Controller of Estate Duty, Gujarat.(1) A
distinction was drawn after distinguishing the decision of
this Court in Gounder’s case between the gifts of Rs.
2,00,000 each in favour of the two donees and the gifts of
the sums of Rs. 1,20,000 and the sum of Rs. 1,99,500 gifted
to the other donees on the ground that the former was not an
absolute gift but was subject to the right of the
partnership firm while the latter assumed the character of
first there being an absolute gift and thereafter parting
with a portion of the enjoyment and benefit in the gifted
property in favour of the donor by investing the money in
the partnership. In the enunciation of the principle of law
there is no appreciable, as there could not be any,
difference between what was said in Gounder’s case by this
Court and what has been said by the learned Chief Justice in
the Gujarat case. But in the application of the principle to
the facts of the two aggregate sums of money it was possible
to take a different view. In relation to the gifts of Rs.
1,20,000 it was possible to take a view that it was a part
and parcel of the same transac-
537
tion namely the receipt of the money by the donees by gift
and their investing the same in the partnership firm. So was
it possible in regard to the sum of Rs. 1,99,500. However, a
different view was taken by the High Court. But in the
instant case it is clear that the ratio of the decisions of
this Court referred to above is squarely applicable and the
Tribunal as well as the High Court was right in holding that
no estate duty could be charged in respect of the two sums
of money viz. Rs. 1,00,000 and Rs. 50,000.
Similarly in the application of the ratio some
difference of opinion will appear to have been expressed by
the High Courts in the case of Controller of Estate Duty v.
Chaman Lal Bery(1); Controller of Estate Duty v. B. V.
Kapadia(2), Controller of Estate Duty, Madras v. S. R. Beevi
Rahman(3) and Controller of Estate Duty, Madras v. V. S.
Suryanarayanan(4). It is not necessary for us to enter into
the fine distinction drawn by the High Courts in each of the
cases referred to above. But we want to emphasise that the
principles of law laid down by this Court in several
decisions which we have reviewed in this judgment with some
further clarification and elucidation should be carefully
and broadly applied to the facts of each case without doing
too much of dichotomy and hair splitting of facts so as not
to easily apply or not to apply the provision of law
contained in Section 10 of the Act.
The facts of Civil Appeal 2528 of 1972 are that in
April or May, 1958, Jiashi Ram, the deceased made gifts of
Rs. 20,000 each in favour of his son Jagdish Chand and his
four daughters-in-law. The donees invested the entire sum of
Rs. 1,00,000 gifted to them in the firm in which Jaishi Ram
was a partner. Jaishi Ram died on October 23, 1961. It
appears these donees were not partners in the firm nor were
they taken as such after the gifts were made in their
favour. Yet, applying the same principle of law the Tribunal
as well as the High Court has held that the accountable
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person is not liable to pay estate duty on the sum of Rs.
1,00,000. Here the donees remained creditors and the sums
gifted were already being utilised by the firm. The same
remained being utilised. Squarely Munro’s ratio is
applicable. In our opinion, this case is on a stronger
footing than that of Civil Appeal 2527, as was rightly
conceded by Mr. S. T. Desai also. We, therefore, uphold the
decision of the High Court in this appeal also.
538
For the reasons stated above, both the appeals are
dismissed. Civil Appeal 2528 is dismissed with costs but
there will be no order as to costs in Civil Appeal 2527 of
1972 as the hearing of this appeal proceeded ex-parte.
P.B.R. Appeals dismissed.
539