1966-VIL-70-SC-DT
Equivalent Citation: [1966] 60 ITR 95
Supreme Court of India
Date: 07.01.1966
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, BOMBAY SOUTH
Vs
MURLIDHAR JHAWAR AND PURNA GINNING AND PRESSING FACTORY
BENCH
Judge(s) : K. SUBBA RAO., J. C. SHAH., S. M. SIKRI
JUDGMENT
The judgment of the court was delivered by
SHAH J.--- In the account year ending November 6, 1953, Murlidhar Jhawar, Pannalal Lahoti and Govindbai carried on business in groundnut, cotton and cotton-seed. In the year of assessment 1954-55, the Income-tax Officer, Nanded, brought to tax a third share in Rs. 51,280, computed as profits from the business in the hands of each of the three parties, and thereafter he called upon Murlidhar to submit a return of the " income of the joint venture " on the footing that the parties thereto constituted an unregistered firm. Murlidhar complied with the requisition and submitted in November, 1957, a return, but later applied to withdraw it by application dated December 18, 1957. The Income-tax Officer rejected the application for withdrawal of return and completed the assessment of the three parties to the joint venture under section 23(3) of the Income-tax Act, 1922, in the status of an unregistered firm and computed the income of the joint venture at Rs. 80,925. In appeal to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner the order passed by the Income-tax Officer was confirmed. In second appeal, the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal set aside the order of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner. The Tribunal held that the Income-tax Officer had the option to assess the individual parties to the joint venture, and he having exercised that option it was not open to him thereafter to reassess the same income collectively in the hands of the three parties to the joint venture in the status of an unregistered firm. But on a concession made by counsel for the three parties, the Tribunal directed that the assessment be " rectified so as to restore the status quo ante. "
The Tribunal submitted a statement of the case and referred the following question to the High Court of Judicature at Bombay :
" Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of the case, the assessment of the unregistered firm was proper and legal, the two partners of this partnership having been assessed in respect of their shares of income from this partnership business ? "
The High Court recorded an answer in the negative. With certificate granted by the High Court, this appeal has been preferred.
Under section 3 of the Indian Income-tax Act, income-tax is charged 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. This court in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Kanpur Coal Syndicate observed at page 228 :
" The section (section 3) 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 the said two entities according to the provisions of the Act. "
The same principle would apply to the case of assessment of partners individually of an unregistered firm. The partners may be assessed individually or they may be assessed collectively in the status of an unregistered firm : the Income-tax Officer cannot however seek to assess the one income twice---once in the hands of the partners and again in the hands of the unregistered firm.
Mr. Viswanatha Sastri for the department contends that the Income-tax Officer making the first assessment of the three parties to the joint venture was not informed that the three parties constituted an unregistered firm and therefore the Income-tax Officer was in law competent to assess the entity which was in truth liable to be assessed to tax, and in making the earlier order of assessment he cannot be deemed to have exercised an option which precluded him from assessing the income of the three parties as an unregistered firm. It is true as pointed out by this court in a recent judgment, Income-tax Officer, A-Ward, Lucknow v. Bachulal Kapoor that in dealing with a claim made by the Income-tax Officer to assess income in the hands of a Hindu undivided family, after assessing it in the hands of the members on the footing that the family was severed, 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 existence of two alternatives ". But on the materials before the court we are unable to accept the plea that the Income-tax Officer was not in possession of information relying on which, if he desired, he could have assessed the three parties collectively as an unregistered firm. There is no warrant for the assumption which counsel for the department asks us to make, that information about the true state of affairs was not with the Income-tax Officer when the first assessment was made by him.
The transactions in various commodities were carried on by Pannalal and Govindbai who were partners of Messrs. Purna Ginning and Pressing Factory and by Murlidhar. The Income-tax Officer had assessed the income of the three parties separately and added to the individual income of each party his or her share in the profits of the joint venture. The Income-tax Officer had information that the three parties, two of whom were members of a registered trading firm, had effected transactions in groundnut, cotton and cotton-seed. Apparently returns in respect of these trading transactions were separately made and a third share was included in the individual assessment of each of the three parties. Apart from an association of individuals or a firm, the Income-tax Act does not recognize a collection of individuals as an entity capable of being assessed to tax. The three parties were not a registered firm, and they could be assessed to tax collectively as an association of individuals or as an unregistered firm if the relation between them was of partners. When the Income-tax Officer assessed the three parties separately he unquestionably exercised an option knowing that they had entered into a trading transaction in which they were jointly interested. The departmental authorities have not chosen to place before the court the returns made by the three parties, and even the orders of assessment individually made against the three parties by the Income-tax Officer are not before this court. Only the final order of the Income-tax Officer which directs : " Add : Joint venture income with Messrs. Purna Ginning and Pressing Factory taken provisionally subject to rectification after the assessment of the joint venture, " is incorporated in the order of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner.
It is common ground that the assessment made by the Income-tax Officer was not a " provisional assessment " within the meaning of section 23B. It would be reasonable to hold that the income of the three parties was assessed under section 23(3) of the Income-tax Act for the income was earned in commercial transactions in different commodities. The Income-tax Officer in assessing the income of the joint venture could not have proceeded without scrutinizing the accounts and other relevant documentary evidence and without determining the shares of the three parties to the joint venture. In determining the shares of the three parties, he had also to determine the contractual relation which gave rise to the right to a share in the profit. Again the order of the Income-tax Officer clearly indicates that he was cognizant of the fact that the income of the joint venture was taxable collectively, but he thought that he could in law in the first instance make an " assessment provisionally " of the three parties separately and then rectify the assessments later. In so holding the Income-tax Officer may have committed an error of law, but he does not appear to have laboured under an ignorance of facts. A survey of the contentions raised before the departmental authorities, the Tribunal and the High Court makes that inference irresistible. The Income-tax Officer who made the assessment under challenge did not state that when the first assessment was made, the facts which had a bearing on the true relationship between the three parties were not placed, and it was not even argued before the Appellate Assistant Commissioner and the Tribunal that those facts were not placed before the Income-tax Officer. The Tribunal held, relying upon T. C. Thakkar v. Commissioner of Income-tax and Joti Prasad Agarwal v. Income-tax Officer, B-Ward, Mathura, that once the option is exercised for assessing the individual partner and including his share of profits in the firm in his assessment, it is not open to the department to assess the same income as income of the unregistered firm.
The appeal therefore fails and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
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