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[Cites 6, Cited by 31]

Supreme Court of India

Commissioner Of Income-Tax, Punjab, ... vs R. B. Jodha Mal Kuthiala on 19 November, 1965

Equivalent citations: 1966 AIR 1433, 1966 SCR (2) 645, AIR 1966 SUPREME COURT 1433

Author: J.C. Shah

Bench: J.C. Shah, S.M. Sikri

           PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, PUNJAB, PATIALA

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
R. B. JODHA MAL KUTHIALA

DATE OF JUDGMENT:
19/11/1965

BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
SUBBARAO, K.
SIKRI, S.M.

CITATION:
 1966 AIR 1433		  1966 SCR  (2) 645


ACT:
     Indian  Income Tax Act 1922, s.  25(4)--Benefit  under-
Business  assessed under Indian Income-tax  Act,  1918--Firm
dissolved on March 31, 1939 and new firm took over  business
from April 1, 1939--Act 7 of 1939 came into force from April
1, 1939--Firm whether carried on business at commencement of
Act 7 of 1939.



HEADNOTE:
     A Hindu undivided family was assessed to tax under	 the
Indian Income-tax Art 1918 in respect of its business, inter
alia,  in  timber.   In 1934 there was	dissolution  of	 the
family and five of its members entered into a partnership to
carry on the business.	Ibis firm was dissolved on March 31,
1939  and its accounts were settled on and up to that  date.
The timber business of the dissolved firm was taken over  by
the assessee firm.  An instrument of partnerhip for the	 new
firm  was  drawn  up on June 29, 1939  in  which  the  facts
relating  to the dissolution of the earlier firm  were	also
recited.   The new firm-the assessee-was also  dissolved  in
March  1943.   In  assessment proceedings  for	1943-44	 the
assessee   claimed  benefit  under  s.	25(3)  or   in	 the
alternative  s.	 25(4) of the Indian Income-tax	 Act,  1922.
The  claim  was	 rejected by  the  assessing  and  appellate
authorities  but  in reference, the High Court	allowed	 the
claim under s. 25(4).  The Commissioner of Income-tax,	with
certificate, appealed to the Supreme Court.
     The material question for determination was whether the
assessee was carrying on business at the commencement of Act
7  of  1939  so as to be entitled to the  benefit  under  s.
25(4).
     HELD:  The Indian Income-tax (Amendment) Act 7 of	1939
was  brought into force on April 1. 1939.  Section  5(3)  of
the  General Clauses Act (10 of 1897) provides	that  unless
the contrary is expressed, a Central Act or Regulation shall
be  construed as coming into being on the expiration of	 the
day  preceding	its  commencement.   Act  7  of	 1939	must
therefore  be deemed to have come into operation at a  point
of  time  immediately on the expiration of March  31,  1939.
[648 D-E]
     Whether  the assessee was carrying on business  at	 the
point of time which Act 7 of 1939 came into force had to  be
decided	 from the recitals in the partnership deed  executed
by  the respondents on June 29, 1939.  The recitals  in	 the
instrument  that the accounts were settled up to  March	 31,
1939  and  that the erstwhile partners had  become  separate
would imply that the firm formed in 1934 did not do business
after March 31, 1939, the assessee was constituted to  carry
on  the	 timber	 business  allotted to it  at  the  time  of
dissolution from April 1, 1939.	 The timber business was  an
old  and  running  business and	 an  intention	to  maintain
continuity   of	 the  business	and  its  transactions	 may
reasonably be attributed to the assessee.  It must therefore
be   held  that	 the  assessee	commenced   doing   business
immediately after the dissolution of the firm of 1934 become
effective.   The business of that firm continued up  to	 the
midnight  of March 31, 1939, and immediately thereafter	 the
business of the assessee commenced. [649 E-H; 650 A]
646
The new partnership therefore came into being at the precise
period of time at which Act 7 of 1939 came into force and it
could  not  be said that the assessee was  not	carrying  on
business  at the commencement of the  Act.  The	 High  Court
was  therefore	right  in  holding  that  the  assessee	 was
entitled on the dissolution of the firm in March 1943 to the
benefit of s. 25(4) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922.



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 95 of 1964.

Appeal from the judgment and order dated April 14, 1961 of the Punjab High Court in Income-tax Reference No. 23 of 1958.

S. T. Desai, R. Ganapathy Iyer, Gopal Singh, B.R.G.K. Achar and R. N. Sachthey, for the appellant.

A. V. Viswanatha Sastri, T. A. Ramachandran, O. C. Mathur for the respondent.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Shah, J. Hakam Mal Tani Mal a Hindu undivided family was assessed to tax under the Indian Income-tax Act, 1918, in respect of income from business, inter alia, in timber at Abdullapur. In 1934 there was a partition of the Hindu undivided family, and five members of that family entered into a partnership to carry on in the name of M/s Hakam Mal Tani Mal the business which was originally carried on by the undivided family. Accounts of this firm were settled till March 31, 1939, and the firm was dissolved. The timber business of the firm was taken over by two partners of the firm-Gajjan Mal and Jodha Mal, who entered into an agreement of partnership to carry on the business in the name of R. B. Jodha Mal Kuthiala-hereinafter called 'assessee'. An instrument of partnership recording the terms of the partnership and reciting the dissolution of the earlier partnership was executed on June 29, 1939. The assessee was dissolved in March 1943.

In assessment proceedings for 1943-44 the assessee contended that the firm Messrs Hakam Mal Tani Mal was dissolved on March 31, 1939, before the Income-tax (Amendment) Act 7 of 1939 had come into force and the first succession to the business after April 1, 1939 was in March 1943, when the assessee was dissolved and on that account the assessee was entitled to relief under S. 25(3), or in the alternative under s. 25(4) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922. The Income-tax Officer completed the assessment without giving to the assessee the benefit of sub-ss. (3) or (4) of s. 25 of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922. The Appel-

647

late Assistant Commissioner confirmed the order holding that succession to the family firm Messrs. Hakam Mal Tani Mal took place on April 1, 1939, and that firm alone was entitled to relief under s. 25(4) and to the second succession which took place on April 1, 1943, after Act 7 of 1939 was brought into force relief under s. 25(4) was not admissible. The Income-tax Appellate Tribunal agreed with the view of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner. Thereafter as directed by the High Court of Punjab under s. 66(2) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, the Tribunal drew up a statement of the case and submitted the following ques- tion of law for the opinion of the High Court :

"Whether in the facts and the circumstances of the case, the Tribunal is correct in law in holding that the assessee firm (R. B. Jodha Mal Kuthiala, Abdullapur Depot, Simla) was not entitled to the benefit provided in Section 25 (3) or 25 (4) of the Income-tax Act, in relation to the assessment in question ?"

The High Court held that the assessee was carrying on business when Act 7 of 1939 was brought into operation and was on that account entitled to the benefit of s. 25 (4) of the Act. With certificate granted by the High Court, this appeal has been preferred.

Sub-section (4) was inserted in s. 25 of the Indian Incometax Act, 1922, by the Income-tax (Amendment) Act 7 of 1939. It provides :

"Where the person who was at the commencement of the Indian Income-tax (Amendment) Act, 1939 (VII of 1939), carrying on any business, profession or vocation on which tax was at any time charged under the provisions of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1918, is succeeded in such capacity by another person, the change not being merely a change "in the constitution of a partnership, no tax shall be payable by the first mentioned person in respect of the income, profits and gains of the period between the end of the previous year and the date of such succession, and such person may further claim that the income, profits and gains of the previous year shall be deemed to have been the in- come, profits and gains of the said period. Where any such claim is made, an assessment shall be made on the basis of the income, profits and gains of the said 648 period, and, if an amount of tax has already been paid in respect of the income, profits and gains of the previous year exceeding the amount payable on the basis of such assessment, a refund shall be given of the difference :
Provided................
There is no dispute that the Hindu undivided family of Hakam Mal Tani Mal was taxed under the Indian Income-tax Act, 1918, in respect of the, timber business and Messrs. Hakam Mal, Tani Mal succeeded to that business in 1934. Accounts of Messrs. Hakam Mal Tani Mal were settled on March 31, 1939, and the business in timber which was carried on by that firm was taken over by the assessee. The departmental authorities held that the assessee was at the commencement of the Indian Incometax (Amendment) Act 7 of 1939 not carrying on business, and that it succeeded to the business on April 1, 1943. The High Court disagreed with that view and opined that the assessee was at the commencement of Act 7 of 1939 carrying on business, and correctness of that opinion is challenged in this appeal.
The Indian Income-tax (Amendment) Act 7 of 1939 was brought into force on April 1, 1939. Section 5 (3) of the General Clauses Act 10 of 1897 provides that unless the contrary is expressed, a Central Act or Regulation shall be construed as coming into operation immediately on the expiration of the day preceding its commencement. Act 7 of 1939 must therefore be deemed to have come into operation at a point of time immediately on the expiration of March 31, 1939. The assessee contends, and the contention has found favour with the High Court, that the assessee was carrying on business at the commencement of the Indian Income-tax (Amendment) Act 7 of 1939. In support of the plea of the assessee reliance was placed only upon the instrument of partnership which was executed on June 29, 1939. The question in dispute must, therefore, be determined on a true interpretation of the terms of the instrument of partnership. Insofar as it is material, the instrument recites :
"We, R. B. Jodha Mal Kuthiala son of Lala Gopi Mal Sahib Sud of the one part and Gajjan Mal Kuthiala son of Lala Hakam Mal Sahib Sud Kuthiala of the other part, residents of Haroli, District Hoshiarpur. and presently of Simla.
649
Whereas we, the deponents, were partners and shareholders in the firm of Lala Hakam Mal Tani Mal Simla and all the partners of firm Lala Hakam Mal Tani Mal understood and settled their accounts upto the 31st of March 1939, on the 31st of March, 1939, and all the partners have become separate from the 1st of April, 1939, and the business at Abdullapur in the name of firm Hakam Mal Tani Mal and R. B. Jodha Mal Kuthiala has fallen to our share to run which we have by means of an oral agreement constituted a separate partnership styled R. B. Jodha Mal Kuthiala,, Abdullapur from the 1st of April, 1939. Now the said oral (agreement) is being reduced to writing and we agree that :"

The instrument of partnership in the first instance recites that the accounts of Messrs. Hakam Mal Tani Mal were settled on March 31, 1939 and upto March 31, 1939. It is then recited that all the partners had become separate from April 1, 1939. This is an ambiguous recital : it may mean that the dissolution had taken place on April 1, 1939 i.e., the business had continued for the whole or a part of the day on April 1, 1939, or it may mean that from the end of March 31, 1939, there had been separation. When a deed recites that a transaction is effective from a particular date it has to be determined in the context in which that expression occurs, whether the date mentioned has to be excluded or to be included. The recitals in the instrument that the accounts were settled upto March 31, 1939, and that the partners had become separate, would imply that the firm of Messrs Hakam Mal Tani Mal did not do business after March 31, 1939. no date of the oral agreement constituting a separate partnership of the assessee is not set out in the instrument, and there is no other evidence in that behalf. But the assessee was constituted to carry on the timber business allotted to it at the time of dissolution from April 1, 1939. The timber business was an old and a running business, and an intention to maintain continuity of the business and its transactions may reasonably be attributed to the assessee. It must therefore be held that the assessee commenced doing business immediately after the dissolution of the firm Messrs Hakam Mal Tani Mal become effective. In the absence of other evidence, it may be held that the business of Messrs. Hakam Mal Tani Mal continued till the midnight of March 31, 1939, and immediately thereafter the business of the assessee commenced.

650

The partnership therefore came into being at the precise point of time at which the Indian Income-tax (Amendment) Act 7 of 1939 came into force and it could not be said that the assessee was not carrying on business at the commencement of the Indian Income-tax (Amendment) Act 7 of 1939. The High Court was, therefore, in our judgment, right in holding that the assessee was entitled on the dissolution of that firm in March 1943 to the benefit of s. 25(4) of the Indian Income- tax Act.

The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.

Appeal dismissed.

651