Legal Document View

Unlock Advanced Research with PRISMAI

- Know your Kanoon - Doc Gen Hub - Counter Argument - Case Predict AI - Talk with IK Doc - ...
Upgrade to Premium
[Cites 18, Cited by 39]

Supreme Court of India

Mandyala Govindu & Co vs Commissioner Of Income Tax, Andhra ... on 6 October, 1975

Equivalent citations: 1975 AIR 2284, 1976 SCR (2) 131, AIR 1975 SUPREME COURT 2284, 1976 (1) SCC 248, 1976 TAX. L. R. 18, 1975 U J (SC) 859, 1975 41 TAXATION 81, 1976 (1) ITJ 46, 1976 (1) SCJ 104, 1976 (1) ANDH WR 11, 1976 SCC (TAX) 8, 1976 UPTC 53, 1976 2 SCR 131, 102 ITR 1

Author: A.C. Gupta

Bench: A.C. Gupta, V.R. Krishnaiyer, Syed Murtaza Fazalali

           PETITIONER:
MANDYALA GOVINDU & CO.

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, ANDHRA PRADESH

DATE OF JUDGMENT06/10/1975

BENCH:
GUPTA, A.C.
BENCH:
GUPTA, A.C.
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA

CITATION:
 1975 AIR 2284		  1976 SCR  (2) 131
 1976 SCC  (1) 248


ACT:
     Registration of  firms-Income Tax	Act, 1922-Sec.	26A-
Whether share  of partners  in loss  to be  mentioned in the
Partnership  Deed-Sec.	 13(b)	of  Partnership	 Act-In	 the
absence of  contract regarding	share in  loss-Whether to be
borne equally or proportionate to profit.



HEADNOTE:
     The appellant assessee is a firm, having three Partners
and one	 minor admitted	 to the benefits of the partnership.
One of	the partners  has 31%  share and  the remaining	 two
partners and  the minor have 23% share each in the profit of
the firm  but the  partnership deed  is silent	about  their
shares in  the losses.	Clauses 9  of the  partnership	deed
provides that the partners are bound to act according to the
provisions of  the Indian  Partnership Act. The firm applied
for registration  under s.  26A of  the Income Tax Act, 1922
which was refused by the Income Tax officer.
     The High  Court in a reference under s. 66(1) held that
unless the  instrument r of partnership specified the shares
of the	partners not  only in  the profits  but also  in the
losses, the firm would not be entitled to registration under
s. 26A.	 The High  Court negatived  the	 contention  of	 the
assessee that  clause 9	 of  the  instrument  indicated	 how
losses were to be apportioned between the partners.
     On appeal	by special  leave it  was contended  by	 the
appellant:
     (1) S.  26A does  not require  that the  instrument  of
partnership  must  specify  the	 respective  shares  of	 the
partners  in   the  losses  and	 it  is	 sufficient  if	 the
proportion in which the losses are to be shared is otherwise
ascertainable.
     (2) Assuming  that s.  26A does  require mentioning the
proportion of  losses  in  the	instrument  of	partnership,
clause 9  of  the  instrument  read  with  s  13(b)  of	 the
Partnership Act satisfies that requirement.
     Dismissing the appeal,
^
     HELD: (1)	A firm whether registered or unregistered is
an assessee  under the	Act and	 can do	 business  as  such.
However, registration  under s. 6A confers on the partners a
benefit to  which they	would not have been entitled but for
s. 26A and such a right being a creature of a statute can be
claimed only in accordance with the statute which confers it
and the	 person who  seeks relief  under s.  26A must  bring
himself strictly  within its  terms before  he can claim the
benefit of it. [133D-E]
     Rao Bahadur Revulu Subba Rao and others v. Commissioner
of Income-Tax, Madras, (1956) 30 I.T.R. 163, relied on.
     (2) In  the case of a registered firm the share of each
partner in  the profit	or loss	 is  added  to	or  set	 off
against, as  the case  may be,	to the	other income  of the
partner. Thus,	the loss,  if any,  affects  the  assessment
proceedings and.  therefore, Income  Tax officer has to know
what are  the respective  shares of the partners in the loss
before allowing the firm to be registered. [134-C-D]
     (3) There	is a  conflict of  opinion amongst  the High
Courts whether it is essential for registration under s. 26A
that the  shares of  the partners  must be  specified in the
partnership deed.  It is  not necessary	 to decide  for	 the
purpose of  this appeal	 which of  the conflicting  views is
correct because	 in the	 present case the appeal is bound to
fail on any view. It is not disputed and cannot	 be disputed
that the  Income Tax Officer before allowing the application
for
132
registration must  be in  a position to ascertain the shares
of the	partners in  the losses.  even if  s.  26A  did	 not
require	 this	to  be	 specified  in	 the  instrument  of
partnership. [135E-F]
     (4)  The	contention  that   clause  9  brings  in  by
implication s.	13 (b)	of  the	 Partnership  Act  and	thus
specifies the  shares of  the  partners	 in  the  losses  is
untenable. s.  13(b) makes the partners liable to contribute
equally to  the losses	only when they are entitled to share
equally in  the profits.  ID this  case the  shares  of	 the
partners are not equal. The case of K. Pitchiah Chettiar. v.
G. Subramaniam	Chettiar I.L.R.	 58 Mad. 25 and In re Albion
Life Assurance Society, 16 Ch. Div. 83, 87, applied. [135 G-
H]
     The law stated in these cases in the context of section
253(2) of  the contract	 Act applies  equally to s. 13(b) of
the Partnership	 Act which  is in  identical terms.  In	 the
absence	 of  any  indication  to  the  Contrary,  where	 the
partners  have	agreed	to  share  the	profits	 in  certain
proportions, the  presumption is that the losses are also to
be shared in like proportions. The other rule that where the
shares in  the profits are unequal the losses must be shared
in the	same proportions  as profits  in the  absence of  an
agreement as  to how  the losses are to be apportioned, also
does not  apply to this case since there is a minor admitted
to the	benefits of  the  partnership.	Even  if  the  adult
partner bear  the losses  in proportion	 to their respective
shares in  the profits,	 the amount  of loss  in the minor's
share would still remain undistributed. Whether the partners
between themselves  will bear  this loss  equally or  to the
extent of their own individual shares, is not even suggested
in the instrument of Partnership. TD There is, therefore, no
means of  ascertaining in this ease how the losses are to be
apportioned. [136-H, 137A-C]



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 63 of 1971.

Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and order dated the 19th February 1970 of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in R.C. No. 50 of 1966.

S. T. Desai and K. Rajendre Choudhary, for the Appellant G. C. Sharma and S. P. Nayar, for the Respondent. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by GUPTA, J. This appeal by special leave is directed against an order of the High Court of Andhra Pradesh at Hyderabad answering in the negative and in favour of the revenue the following question referred to it under sec. 66(1) of the Indian Income-Tax Act, 192 (hereinafter referred to as the Act).

"Whether the Assessee is entitled to registration under Section 26A of the Income-Tax Act, 1922 for the assessment year 1961-62."

The assessee is a firm. The instrument of partnership was executed on January S, 1959 but the application for registration under sec. 26A remained undisposed of until the assessment for the year 1961-62 was taken up. The instrument shows that three persons, Mandyala Narayana, Mandyala Venkatramaiah, Mandyala Srinivasulu and a minor, Mandyala Jaganmohan who was admitted to the benefits of the partnership, held the following shares: Narayana 31 per cent, Venkatramaiah 23 per cent, Srinivasulu 23 per cent, and minor Jaganmohan 23 per cent: Clause 2 of the instrument which sets out the 133 shares of the partners add that the profits of the above partnership A business shall be divided and enjoyed according to the shares specified above. " There is no clause in the instrument specifying the proportion in which the three adult partners were to share the losses, if any. Having set out all the terms of agreement, the instrument closes with clause 9 which states:

"We (the partners) are bound to act according to the above mentioned stipulations and also according to the provisions of the Indian Partnership Act...."

The High Court was of the view that unless the instrument of partnership specified the shares of the partners not only in the profits hut also in the losses, the firm would not be entitled to registration under sec. 26A, and negatived the contention raised on behalf of the assessee that clause 9 of the instrument indicated how losses were to be apportioned between the partners. The correctness of this decision is challenged by the appellant firm.

It is not that a firm to be able to trade must be registered under sec. 26A. A firm, registered or unregistered, is an assessee under the Act and can do business as such. However, registration under sec. 26A "confers on the partners a benefit", as would appear from the provisions of sec. 23 (5) of the Act, "to which they would not have been entitled but for section 26A, and such a right being a creature of the statute, can be claimed only in accordance with the statute which confers it, and a person who seeks relief under section 26A must bring himself strictly within its terms before he can claim the benefit of it": Rao Bahadur Ravulu Subba Rao and others v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras.(1) The question in this case is whether in the absence of a specific statement in the instrument as to the proportion in which the partners were to share the losses, the requirement of sec. 26A can be said to have been satisfied. Sec 26A reads:

"26A. (1) Application may be made to the Income- tax officer on behalf of any firm, constituted under an instrument of partnership specifying the individual shares of the partners for registration for the purposes of this Act and of any other enactment for the time being in force relating to income-tax or super- tax.
(2) The application shall be made by such person or persons, and at such times and shall contain such particulars shall be in such form, and be verified in such manner, as may be prescribed; and it shall be dealt with by the Income-tax officer in such manner as may be prescribed."

The required particulars are specified in rules 2 and 3 of the Rules framed under the Act and the form of application including the Schedule annexed to rule 3. Paragraph 3 of the Form requires the partners to `'certify that the profits (or loss if any) " of the relevant period were or will (1) (1956) 30 I. T. R. 163.

134

be, as the case is, '`divided or credited, as shown in Section 8 of the Schedule". In Section 8 of the Schedule are to be recorded the "particulars of the apportionment of the income, profits or gains (or loss) of the business, profession or vocation in the previous year between the partners who in that previous year were entitled to share in such income, profits or gains (or loss)". Note (2) appended to this Schedule states that if any partner is entitled to share in profits but is not liable to bear a similar proportion of any losses, this fact should be indicated. It is clear therefore that the application for registration which has to be made in the prescribed form must include particulars of the apportionment of the loss, if any. It does not appear to have been considered in this case whether the application for registration made by the firm conforms to the prescribed rules; the dispute is confined to the question whether sec. 26A requires the instrument of partnership to specify the individual shares of the partners in the profits as well as the losses of the business.

Section 23(5) of the Act provides different procedures in the assessment of a registered firm and a firm that is unregistered. Without going into details, in the case of a registered firm the share of each partner in the firm's profits is added to his other income and he is assessed on his total income which includes his share of the profits and the tax payable by him is determined accordingly. There is a proviso which lays down that "if such share of any partner is a loss it shall be set off against his other income or carried forward and set off in accordance with the provisions of section 24". Thus, the loss, if any, affects the assessment proceeding and therefore the Income-tax officer has to know what are the respective shares of the partners in the losses before allowing the firm to be registered. It is not disputed that the Income-tax officer must be in a position to ascertain how losses are to be apportioned; the question is whether it is a condition for registration under sec. 26A that the instrument of partnership must specify the respective shares of the partners in the losses. According to the appellant sec. 26A has no such requirement. The appellant contends that sec. 26A does not require specification of the shares in losses in the instrument of partnership and it is sufficient if the proportion in which the losses are to be shared is otherwise ascertainable, and that, assuming the section did so require, clause 9 of the instrument satisfies that requirement.

The contention that clause 9 specifies the respective shares of the partners in the losses is obviously untenable. This clause says that the partners are "bound to act according to the provisions of the Indian Partnership Act"; that they are in any case, and it is not clear which provision of the Partnership Act indicated the proportion in which the partners were to bear the losses in this case. Counsel for the appellant refers to sec. 13(b) of the Partnership Act in this connection.

Sec. 12(b) reads:

"Subject to contract between the partners-
(a) x x x x
(b) the partners are entitled to share equally in the profits earned, and shall contribute equally to the losses sustained by the firm :"
135

We shall refer to sec. 13(b) in more detail when we consider the other contention of the appellant, but assuming that this provision has any relevance to the facts of this case, which it has not, bringing in by implication sec. 13(b) from a general statement that the partners are to act in accordance with the Partnership Act does not amount to specification of the partners' shares in the losses, and the instrument of partnership, it must therefore be held, fails to comply with sec. 26A of the Act, were this a requirement of that section.

The other contention of the appellant is that it is not essential for registration under sec. 26A of the Act that the shares of the partners in the losses must be specified in the partnership deed. In support of this contention reliance is placed mainly on two decisions, one of the Mysore High Court: R. Sannappa and Sons v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Mysore (1) and the other of the Allahabad High Court: Hiralal Jagannath Prasad v. Commissioner of Income- tax, U.P. (2) on behalf of the revenue it is claimed on the authority of a decision of the Gujarat High Court, Thacker & Co. v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Gujarat (3), that the shares in the profits and losses have both to be specifically stated in the instrument of. partnership in order to comply with the conditions laid down in sec. 26A to obtain registration. The view taken by the Gujarat High Court appears to have been followed by the Kerala High Court in the following cases among others: C. T. Palu & Sons v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Kerala (4) and Commissioner of Income-tax, Kerala v. Ithappiri & George (5), There is thus a conflict of opinion in the High Courts on the point. It will not be necessary, however, for the purpose of this appeal to consider at any length the conflicting views of the different High Courts and decide which view is correct according to us because on the facts of the case the appeal is bound to fail on any view. It is not, and it cannot be, disputed that the Income-tax officer before allowing the application for registration must be in a position to ascertain the shares of the partners in the losses even if sec. 26A did not require the shares in the losses to be specified in the instrument of partnership. Counsel for the appellant argues that clause 9 of the instrument refers to sec. 13(b) of the Partnership Act by implication and, accordingly, in the absence of any contrary indication, it must be held that the partners are liable to share the losses equally. The argument is not based on a correct appreciation of the scope of sec. 13(b) and the facts of the case. Sec. 13(b), it seems plain to us, makes the partners liable to contribute equally to the losses only when they are entitled to share equally in the profits. In this case the shares of the partners are not equal. In the absence of any indication to the contrary, where the partners have agreed to share the profits in certain proportions, the presumption is that the losses are also to be shared in like proportions. Jessel M. R. states the principle in In re Albion Life Assurance Society (G) as follows:

(1) [1967] 66 I.T.R. 27. (2) [1967] 66 I.T.R. 293. (3)[1966] 61 I.T.R. 540. (4) [1969] 72 I T. R. 641 (5) [1973] 88 L.T.R. 332. (6) 16 Ch. Div. 83 (87).

10-L1276SCI/75 136 "It is said, as a general proposition of law, that in ordinary mercantile partnerships where there is a community of profits in a definite proportion, the fair inference is that losses are to be shared in the same proportion."

In the case before us the partners having unequal shares in the profits, there can be no presumption that the losses are to be equally shared between them Sec. 13(b) of the Indian Partnership Act, 1932 reproduces the provisions of the repealed sec. 253(2) of the Indian Contract Act, 1872. In K. Pitchiah Chettiar v. G.Subramaniam Chettiar(1), Ramesam J. explained the scope of sec. 253 (2) of the Indian Contract Act, 1872:

"Section 253(2) of the Indian Contract Act lays down that all partners are entitled to share equally in the profits of the partnership business, and must contribute equally towards the losses sustained by the partnership. As I read the section, it lays down two presumptions with which the Court should start. The two presumption are clubbed in one sub section. The first is, if no specific contract is proved, the shares of the partners must be presumed to be equal. In the present case the plaintiff alleged unequal shares which were not denied by the defendants. So the parties being agreed on their pleadings as to the shares possessed by them in the profits, there is no scope for the application of this first presumption. The second presumption is that where the partners are to participate in the profits in certain shares they should also participate in the losses in similar shares. Now the section says that both should be in equal shares but implies that if unequal shares are admitted by the partners as to profits that applies equally to losses. In the absence of a special agreement, that this should be the presumption with which one should start is merely a matter of common sense and in India one has only to rely on section 114 of the Evidence Act for such a principle."

The law stated here in the context of sec. 253(2) of the Contract Act, 1872 applies equally to sec. 13(b) of the Partnership Act, 1932: the two provisions are in identical terms. On the facts of the present case, and having regard to the scope of sec. 13(b), the section has plainly no application.

(1) I. L. R. 58 Mad. 25 (28).

137

The other rule that where the shares in the profits are unequal, the A losses must be shared in the same proportions as the profits if there is no agreement as to how the losses are to be apportioned, does not also apply to this case. In this case even if the adult partners bear the losses in proportion to their respective shares in the profits, the amount of loss in the minor's share would still remain undistributed. Will the partners between them bear this loss equally, or to the extent of their own individual shares ? To this the instrument of partnership does not even suggest an answer. There is therefore no means of ascertaining in this case how the losses are to be apportioned.

For the reasons stated above, the appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.

P.H.P.Appeal dismissed.

138