Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
CONTROLLER OF ESTATE DUTY, MADRAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
C. R. RAMACHANDRA GOUNDER
DATE OF JUDGMENT27/02/1973
BENCH:
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
BENCH:
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
HEGDE, K.S.
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
CITATION:
1973 AIR 1170 1973 SCR (3) 554
1973 SCC (4) 102
CITATOR INFO :
F 1973 SC2598 (2)
E 1975 SC 435 (10,17,18)
F 1977 SC 463 (20,23)
APL 1980 SC 142 (10,13)
RF 1986 SC 631 (5)
F 1988 SC1426 (11)
ACT:
Estate Duty Act (34 of 1953), s. 10-Scope of.
HEADNOTE:
The father of the respondent Was a partner in a firm. He
owned property which the firm was occupying as a tenant at
will. In 1953 he executed a deed of settlement under which
he transferred that property to two of his sons absolutely
and irrevocably. After the transfer the firm continued as
tenant paying rent to the two donees by crediting each of
their accounts in the account books of the firm in equal
shares. The father also wrote, to the firm to transfer from
his account five sums of Rs. 20,000 each with effect from
April, 1953, to the credit of his five sons in the firms
books. The sons did not withdraw any amount from their
accounts in the firm and the amounts continued to be
invested in the firm for which interest at 7 1/22% per annum
was paid to them. The father continued to, be a partner of
the firm even after the transfer fill 1957. when the firm
was dissolved. On his death thereafter the property leased
out to the firm which was transferred to two of his son,-,
as well as Rupees one lakh gifted to the five sons, were
sought to be included in the estate of the deceased on the
ground that the donees bad not been. in possession and
enjoyment of the subject matter of the gifts to the entire
exclusion of the donor within the meaning of s. 10 of the
Estate Duty Act, 1953. The High Court, on reference, held
against the Revenue.
Dismissing the appeal to this Court.
HELD : Neither the property gifted to the donees nor the
amount of Rs. 1 lakh, gifted to the five sons could be
included in the estate of the deceased. [81A-B]
Section 10 consists of two conditions, namely, (1) the donee
must bona fide have assumed possession ’and enjoyment of the
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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; and unless both
are satisfied the property would be liable to Estate duty.
The second part of the section has two limbs, namely, the
deceased must be entirely excluded,, (a) from the property,
and (b) from any benefit by contract or otherwise. The word
"otherwise" must be construed ejusdem generis and it must be
interpreted to mean some kind of legal obligation or some
transaction enforceable at law. or in equity, which, though
not in the form of a contract, may confer a benefit on the
donor. [557 F-H. 558A-C]
In the present case, the first two conditions are satisfied
because of the unequivocal transfer of the properties and
the last limb of the condition relating to any benefit to
the donor by contract or otherwise is inapplicable. The
donor, on the date when he gifted the property which was
leased out to the firm, had two rights, namely, ownership in
the property and right to terminate the tenancy and obtain
posses-
555
(Jaganmohan Reddy, J.)
sign thereof. He has transferred the ownership and has
given such possession as the circumstances and the nature of
the property admit. It could not be said 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
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. [558C-A]
George Da Costa v. Controller of Estate Duty, Mysore, 63
I.T.R 497, followed.
Munro and Others v. Commissioner of Stamp Duties, [1934]
A.C. 61, Clifford John Chick and Another v. Commissioner of
Stamp Duties, 37 I.T.R. (E.D.) 89 and Commissioner of Stamp
Duties of New South Wales v. Perpetual Trustee Company
Limited, [1943] A.C. 425, referred to.
Controller of Estate Duty, Mysore v. S. Aswthanarayana Setty
and Another, 72 I.T.R. 29, approved.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1391 of
1970.
Appeal by certificate from the judgment and order dated
November 25, 1968 of the Madras High Court in Tax Case No.
103 of 1965.
B. B. Ahuja, S. P. Nayar and R. N. Sachthey, for the
Appellant.
T. A. Ramachandran, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
JAGANMOHAN REDDY, J.-This appeal is by certificate against
the judgment of the Tamil Nadu High Court, which has
answered the following two questions referred to it, in
favour of the assessee and against the Revenue :
(1) Whether on the facts and in the
circumstances of the case the Tribunal was
right in law in holding that the house
property in Avanashi Road, Coimbatore, is not
liable to estate duty as property deemed to
pass on the death of the deceased under
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section 10 of the Estate Duty Act, 1953 ?
(2) Whether on the facts and in the circu
mstances of the case, the Tribunal was
right in law in holding that the sum of Rs. 1
lakh gifted by the deceased to his sons in
1953 is not liable to estate duty as property
deemed to pass on the death of the deceased
under section 10 of the Estate Duty Act, 1953
?
556
These questions arose on the facts set out in the statement
of the case which are : one Ramaiah Gounder was a partner in
the firm called N. Desai Gounder & Co., Coimbatore. He
owned property which. the firm was occupying as tenant-at-
will. In August 1953. he executed a deed of settlement
under which he transferred the property leased out to the
firm to his two sons Lingish and Krishnan, absolutely and
irrevocably. After this transfer, the firm continued to be
in occupation of the premises paying rent thereof at Rs.
300/- p.m. to the two donees by crediting each of their
accounts in the account books of the firm in equal shares.
lit may be mentioned that Ramaiah the father continued to be
a partner of the firm even after the transfer till April 13,
1957, when the firm was dissolved. He had also an account
with the firm Desai Gounder & Co., and on March 30, 1953, he
requested the firm by a letter to transfer from his account
five sums of Rs. 20,000/- each with effect from April 1,
1953 to the credit of his five sons in the firm’s books. He
also wrote to the live sons informing them of the transfer.
Though the sons did not withdraw any amount from their
accounts in the firm, the amounts continued to be invested
in the firm for which interest at 7 1/2% per annum was paid
to them.
On the death of Ramaiah Gounder on May 5, 1957, the Assis-
tant Controller of Estate Duty, included in the estate of
the deceased, the property leased out to the firm which was
transferred to his two sons. According to him, possession
and enjoyment of the subject-matter of the gift had not been
assumed by the donees nor had they retained possession
thereof to the ’entire exclusion of the donor, inasmuch as
the partnership in which the donor was a partner with other
parties, continued to be in possession and enjoyment of the
gifted property as tenants at will of the donees. With
respect to the gift of Rs. 1 lakh to the five sons of the,
deceased, the Assistant Controller held that the donees had
not been. in possession and enjoyment. of the subject-matter
of the gift to the entire exclusion of the donor within the
meaning of S. 10 of the Estate Duty Act. He, therefore,
included this sum of Rs. 1 lakh in the principal value of
the estate of the deceased.
The accountable persons appealed to the Appellate Controller
who confirmed the said inclusion. The Tribunal on a further
appeal, however, disagreed with the findings of the
Assistant Controller and the Appellate Controller. It held
that the firm, of which the deceased was a partner occupied
the property but that such interest was not as owner of the
property, and therefore, the gift had been made without the
donor retaining any interest, as much it could not be
included in the estate of the deceased under S. 10 of the
Estate Duty Act. It further held that the sum of Rs. 1 lakh
gifted to the sons was given by the sons to the firm
557
which had benefit of the money and that the father could not
be said to have enjoyed the benefit of the money as partner
of the firm. In this view, the Tribunal excluded the sum of
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Rs. 3 lakh from the estate of the deceased. The High Court
agreed with these findings.
It is contended before us by the learned Advocate for the
Revenue that both the Tribunal and the High Court were in
err-or in holding that the property as well as the sum of
Rs. 1 lakh were enjoyed by the donees to the exclusion of
the donor or that the deceased did not derive ’benefit
therefrom within the meaning of s. 10 of the Estate Duty
Act, because, firstly, the donor was ;a partner in the firm
which had occupied the property as tenants-at-will even
after the gift, and secondly, the amount of Rs. 1 lakh,
though entered in each of the accounts of the donor’s five
sons in the books ’of the firm, was not utilised or enjoyed
by them in any manner. Section 10 of the Estate Duty Act,
as, in force on the date of the death of the deceased, was
as follows
"10. Property taken under any gift, whenever
made, shall be deemed to pass on the donor’s
death to the extent that bona fide possession
and enjoyment of it was not immediately
assumed by the donee and thenceforward
retained to the entire exclusion of-the donor
of any benefit to him by contract or
otherwise;
"Provided that the property shall not be
deemed to pass by reason only that it was not,
as from the date of the gift, exclusively
retained as; aforesaid, if, ’by means of the
surrender of the reserved benefit or
otherwise, it is subsequently enjoyed to the
entire exclusion of the donor or of any
benefit to him for at least two years before
the death :............
The crux of the above section as pointed out by this Court,
in George. Da Costa v. Controller of Estate Duly,
Mysore,(1) 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. Both these conditions are
cumulative. Unless each of these conditions is satisfied,
the property would be liable to estate duty under s. 10 of
the Act. The second part of the section has two limbs: the
deceased must be entirely excluded (i) from the property,
and (ii) from any benefit by contract or otherwise. The
words "by contract or otherwise" in the second limb of the
section will not control the words "to
(1) 63 I.T.R. 497, at p. 501.
558
the entire exclusion of the donor" in the first limb. The
first limb may be infringed if the donor occupies or enjoys
the property or its income, even though he has no right to
do so which he could legally enforce against the donee. In
other words, in order to attract the section, it is not
necessary that the possession of the donor of the gift must
be referable to some contractual or other arrangement
enforceable in law or in equity. In the context of the
section, the word "otherwise" should be construed ejusdem
generis and it must be interpreted to mean some kind of
legal obligation or some transaction enforceable at law or
in equity, which, though not in the form of a contract, may
confer a benefit on the donor.
There is no doubt on the facts of this case, the first two
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conditions are satisfied because there is an unequivocal
transfer of the property and also of the money, in the one
case by a settlement deed. and in the other by crediting the
amount of Rs. 20,000/- in each of the sons’ account with the
firm which thenceforward became liable to the sons for the
payment of the said amount and. the interest at 7 1/2% per
annum thereon. In these circumstances, the Revenue has
failed to establish that the donees had not retained
possession and enjoyment of the property or the amount and
that the deceased was not entirely excluded from the
possession and enjoyment thereof. The last limb of the
condition relating to any benefit to the donor by contract
or otherwise is inapplicable in this case. The donor on the
date when he gifted the property to his sons which was
leased out to the firm, had two rights, namely, of ownership
in the property and the right to terminate the tenancy and
obtain the possession thereof. There is no dispute that the
ownership has been transferred subject to the tenancy at
will granted to the firm, to the donor’s two sons because
the firm from thenceforward had attorned to the donees as,
their tenant by crediting the rent of Rs. 300/- to the
respective accounts in equal moity. 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 trans
fer the possession in any other manner unless he was
required to effectuate the gift for the purpose of S. 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 an 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
559
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. The Privy Council in Munro and others v.
Commissioner of Stamp Duties(1) was dealing with a case of a
similar nature. The donor in that case by six registered
transfers in the form prescribed, transferred by way of gift
all his right, title and interest in portions of the land to
each of his four sons and to trustees for each of his two,
daughters and their children. The four sons and the two
daughters were, prior to this transfer, on a verbal
agreement with the donor, treated as partners of the
business carried on by him as grazier of the land owned by
him. The evidence showed that the transfers were taken
subject to the partnership agreement and on the
understanding that any partner could withdraw and work his
land separately. On an analogous provision of the law, the
Privy Council thought it unnecessary to determine the
precise nature of the right of the partnership at the time
of the transfers because it was either a tenancy during the
term of the partnership or a licence coupled with an
interests Lord Tomlin, giving his opinion, observed at p.
67, that "the benefit which the donor had as a member of the
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partnership in the right to which the gift was subject was
not in their Lordships’ opinion a benefit referable in any
way to the gift’. This decision was referred to and
distinguished in Olifford John Chick and another v.
Commissioner of Stamp Duties(2), and though it was.
considered to have no application to the case at point,_
Viscount Simond ’ observed at p. 97 : "It must often be a
matter of fine distinction what is the subject-matter of
gift. It as in Munro’s case, the gift is of a property
shorn of certain of the rights which appertain to complete
ownership, the donor cannot, merely because the remains in
possession and enjoyment of those rights, be said within the
meaning of the section not to be excluded from possession
and enjoyment of that which he has given." In the
Commissioner of Stamp Duties of New South Wales v. Perpetual
Trustee Company Limited(3) the Privy Council further
elaborated the concept of the nature of possession required
to be given to the donee as not to attract the analogous
provisions of the Commonwealth Act. Lord Russel of Killowen
observed at p. 440
"The linking of possession with enjoyment as a
composite object which has to be assumed by
the donee indicate that the possession and
enjoyment contemplated is beneficial
possession and enjoyment by the object of the
donor’s bounty................ because the son
was (through the medium of the trustees)
immediately put
(1) [1934] A.C. 61. (2) 37 I.T.R. [E.D.] 89-
(3)
560
in such bona fide beneficial possession and
enjoyment of the property comprised in the
gift as the nature of the gift and the
circumstances permitted. Did he assume it,
and thenceforth retain it to the-entire
exclusion of the donor ? The answer, their
Lordships think, must be in the affirmative,
and for two reasons : (1) the settlor had no
enjoyment and possession and enjoyment as he
had from the fact that the legal ownership of
the shares vested in him and his co-trustees
as joint tenants, was had by him solely on
behalf of the donee. In his capacity as donor
he was entirely excluded from possession and
enjoyment of what he had given to his son.
Did the donee retain possession and enjoyment
to the entire exclusion of any benefit to the
settlor of whatever kind or in any way
whatsoever ? Clearly yes."
The views expressed by the Privy Council are in complete
accord with our views already expressed. This was also the
view held in Controller of Estate Duty, Mysore v. S.
Aswathanarayana Setty ,and another(1), where a Bench of the
Mysore High Court considered both the case of Olifford John
Chick and of Munro above referred to. In that case, on June
30, 1954, the deceased transferred to his two sons Rs.
57,594 being half of the share standing to his credit as on
that date: in the books of a firm in which he was a partner
and from July 1, 1954, the sons were also taken as partners
in the firm. On the death of the deceased on November 16,
1957, the Assistant Controller held that the amount
transferred to the sons must be deemed to pass as per the
provisions of s. 10 of the Estate Duty Act, which decision
was confirmed by the Appellate Controller. The Tribunal,
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however, held that the sum which subsequently was rectified
to be Rs. 73,695 Was not so includible. One of us (Hegde,
J., as he then was), speaking for +the Bench, observed at p.
32
On the facts of the case, it cannot be said
that, after the gifts, the donees did not
retain, the property gifted ,to the entire
exclusion of the donor or that the donor had
any benefit either by contract or otherwise in
the property gifted. That in order that the
property could deem to pass and estate duty
could be leviable in such cases, the benefit
of the donor must be a benefit referable to
his own property. The view, that if it is
once found ,that the deceased had some benefit
in the property, that in itself was sufficient
to bring the case within the ambit of section
10 irrespective of the question whether that
benefit was referable or not referable to the
gift, in our opinion, is erroneous."
(1) 72 I.T.R. 29.
561
In our view, neither the property gifted to the donees, nor
the amount of Rs. 1 lakh gifted to the five sons, could be
included in the estate of the. deceased. The, appeal is
accordingly dismissed with costs.
V.P.S. Appeal dismissed.
562