1986-VIL-65-SC-DT

Equivalent Citation: Other Citation: [1986] 160 ITR 674 (SC), 1986 AIR 1428, 1986 (3) SCR 26, 1986 (3) SCC 310

Supreme Court of India

Date: 09.05.1986

COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, CALCUTTA

Vs

BIJU PATNAIK

BENCH

Judge(s)  : SABYASACHI MUKHERJEE. and R. S. PATHAK.

JUDGMENT

The judgment of the court was delivered by

SABYASACHI MUKHARJI J.-Whether a question of law referable to the High Court arises out of the order of the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal in this case, is the question that arises in these appeals by special leave from the decision of the Orissa High Court. Several questions of law were sought for from the Tribunal to be referred out of the decision of the Tribunal under section 256(1) of the Income-tax Act, 1961 (hereinafter called " the Act "). The Tribunal refused to refer these questions. An application was made under section 256(2) of the Act asking for reference on those questions from the High Court. The High Court rejected the applications and refused to call for a statement of the case on those questions. This appeal by special leave is from the said decision of the High Court.

It is not necessary to refer to all the questions that were pressed before the High Court because all these questions were not pressed before this court.

The following questions were, however, canvassed before this court.

" 1. Whether the findings of the Appellate Tribunal are vitiated in law by reason of it having ignored relevant and admissible evidence and having relied on incorrect facts and misstatement of facts?

2. Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of the case, the conclusion of the Tribunal that the Kalinga Foundation Trust came into existence in 1947 and that it was distinct from the Trust created by the assessee in 1949 logically followed from the materials on record or it was perverse in the sense that no reasonable man could come to it on the said materials ?

3. Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of the case, in arriving at the finding that the Kalinga Foundation Trust had acquired property from donations from the public, the Tribunal erred in law in not giving due consideration to the several matters relevant for determination of the points which had been considered by the Income-tax Officer in the assessment order ?

4. Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of the case, the Tribunal was right in holding that the income from dividend shown in the name of the Kalinga Foundation Trust, the interest on the loans advanced in the name of the Kalinga Foundation Trust and all investments, remittances, receipts and actual payments in the name of the Kalinga Foundation Trust did not belong to the assessee and should, therefore, be deleted from the assessment of the assessee ?

5. Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of the case, there was any evidence in support of the Tribunal's findings that the assessee had collected donation from the public for the Kalinga Foundation Trust ?

6. If the answer to question No. 5 (rearranged by us) be in the negative, then whether the Tribunal was right in holding that the amounts donated by the assessee to the said trust were satisfactorily explained and accordingly they were not to be included in the assessment of the assessee ?

7. Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of the case, the Tribunal was right in holding that the Revenue authorities were bound to accept the decision of the Supreme Court in Jain v. Kalinga Tubes Ltd. [1965] 35 Comp Cas 351 as to the ownership of 39,000 shares of M/s. Kalinga Tubes Ltd. in spite of the materials collected by the Income-tax Officer subsequent to the delivery of the judgment in the said case ?

8. If the answer to question No. 7 (rearranged by us) be in the negative then whether the finding of the Tribunal that the persons in whose names the said shares stood were not the benamidars of the assessee was perverse and was arrived at without due consideration of the material considered by the Income-tax Officer in detail on the point? "

The controversy in these appeals related to the various additions made by the Revenue to the total income of the assessee relating to the assessment years 1962-63, 1963-64 and 1964-65. The assessee claimed in his assessment deduction in respect of the payments of interest on loans taken from Kalinga Foundation Trust and others and certain dividend transactions relating to the shares of Kalinga Tubes Ltd.

While examining the evidence in support of these claims, the Incometax Officer issued a detailed letter dated October 17, 1965, to the assessee informing him about the evidence available with the Revenue against him and requesting him, inter alia, to produce evidence and prove (i) that the cash credits appearing in his account in the name of the Kalinga Foundation Trust were genuine, and (ii) that 39,000 shares of Kalinga Tubes Ltd. standing in the names of B. K. Mall, Smt. Swaran Oberoi, Shri K.C. Dalai Shri G. C. Patnaik, etc., were not really his own investment. After examining the assessee's evidence and on the basis of the documentary evidence and government records and on the basis of local enquiries made, the Income-tax Officer has come to the conclusion that no trust in the name of the Kalinga Foundation Trust really existed and even if it existed, it had no funds of its own and that the name " Kalinga Foundation Trust was used by the assessee as a camouflage to put through his unaccounted money. Accordingly, all cash credits appearing in the books of accounts of the assessee himself or in the books of other concerns or persons or remittances of actual payments in the name of the trust were treated by the Income-tax Officer as moneys coming out of the undisclosed sources of the assessee and accordingly assessed the same as his income from undisclosed sources. All interest and dividend received in the name of the trust were included by the Income-tax Officer in the assessment of the assessee as his own income. The Income-tax Officer was also of the opinion that the moneys advanced in the name of the trust to several persons in connection with the acquisition of 39,000 shares of Kalinga Tubes Ltd. which were issued in 1958, actually belonged to the assessee. Accordingly, the dividend on the said shares was treated as the income of the assessee and the expenses incurred in that connection were allowed as deduction. The persons, in whose names the 39,000 shares of Kalinga Tubes Ltd. stood, were treated by the Income-tax Officer as benamidars of the assessee. Thus, in respect of the assessment years under consideration, several items were included as income in the hands of the assessee on this score. It is not necessary to set out the items.

Against the orders of the assessment, appeals were filed by the assessee before the Appellate Assistant Commissioner. As grievance was made before the Appellate Assistant Commissioner that there was violation of due opportunity being given to the assessee, the Appellate Assistant Commissioner disposed of the appeals by setting aside the assessments for the years under consideration and remanded the matter to the Income-tax Officer to frame issues and give due opportunity to the assessee to cross-examine the witnesses in the light of the observations made in the order. Against the order of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner, appeals were filed. A prayer was made that the appeals should be remanded to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner. The Tribunal, however, disposed of the appeals on the relevant materials on record.

It was contended on behalf of the Revenue (sic) before the Tribunal that the Kalinga Foundation Trust had come into existence as alleged in 1947 at a public meeting held at Killa Maidan, Cuttack, and it was registered long thereafter on November 28, 1959. It was stated that the trust was genuine and it bad sufficient funds obtained by donations and consequently was in a position to lend the amounts found credited in the assessee's books and in the books of other concerns. The accounting , year followed by the said trust was the calendar year whereas the accounting year followed by the assessee was the financial year ending on March 31, 1962, March 31, 1963, and March 31, 1964, respectively, for the three years in question. One of the points urged on behalf of the assessee was that if it was intended to use the trust as a camouflage, the accounting year of the trust would have been the same as that of the assessee. It was further contended that the minute book and books, of account were maintained by the trust and that the trust had its own written constitution by way of memorandum and articles of association and rules. The funds of the trust were lying in trust with the Maharaja of Sonepur as he was the honorary treasurer of the trust. It was further pointed out on behalf of the assessee that eminent persons were members of the trust.

On behalf of the Revenue, it was, however, contended before the Tribunal that on the basis of the facts emerging on an examination of the assessee's evidence and facts found on the basis of the documentary evidence, the Appellate Assistant Commissioner should have confirmed the assessments. It was further stated by the Revenue that local inquiries and oral testimony had been used by the Income-tax Officer to support the conclusions already arrived at on an examination of the assessee's own evidence and corroborated by documentary evidence and, therefore, the Appellate Assistant Commissioner should not have set aside the assessment on the ground that the persons who were examined by the Income-tax Officer should have been allowed to be cross-examined by the assessee. It was submitted that the gist of the enquiries had been communicated to the assessee to enable him to meet the case against him and it was for the assessee to produce before the Income-tax Officer the persons who had collected the funds for the Kalinga Foundation Trust as the Income-tax Officer was not bound by the technical rules of evidence.

So far as the acquisition of 39,000 shares of Kalinga Tubes Ltd. was concerned, it was submitted by the Revenue that it had collected evidence to prove that these shares were purchased by the assessee benami in the names of Shri B. K. Mall, Shri G. C. Patnaik, etc. It was pointed out by the Revenue that the assessee had created a private registered trust in 1949 out of his own properties having the same name as Kalinga Foundation Trust and that a reference to Kalinga Foundation Trust in some of the documents produced by the assessee was to this private trust and not to any public trust of the same name alleged to have been created at a public function.

After considering the materials, the Tribunal held that the Kalinga Foundation Trust came into existence in 1947 and continued after its registration in 1959 under the same name and style and the fund of the trust was built up by collection of donations from the public at large.

It may be pointed out and we are of the opinion that this is the core of the controversy in this case, i.e., whether there was no evidence, substantial or reliable, produced to indicate who were the persons who had contributed to the trust, how much they had contributed to the trust, the identity and the creditworthiness of the donors to the said trust.

It was contended on behalf of the assessee that the said trust which came into existence was a separate and distinct entity and the assessee was only holding an executive post in that trust. It was held by the Tribunal that seven persons who were designated by the Income-tax Officer as benamidars of the assessee for the purchase of the shares of M/s. Kalinga Tubes Ltd. were not benamidars and the money required for the purchase of these shares had been raised by themselves. The Tribunal held that the investments made by the trust in the assessee's group of industries or with the assessee were from its own resources and funds and such investments were guided by business expediency and prudence. The finding of the Tribunal is that the trust was comprised of persons of public repute and the control and management of the trust styled as " Kalinga Foundation Trust " were under the effective control of the board of trustees comprised of persons of public reputation. The Tribunal accordingly held that the income from interest, dividend or any other usufruct arising out of the investments made by the trust in the various concerns and the investments of the trust which were included in the assessments of the assessee in the years under reference should be excluded as appertaining to a separate and distinct entity and, therefore, directed the Income-tax Officer to exclude these amounts from the assessments of the assessee in all these three years. The Revenue did not accept the findings of the Tribunal as correct as mentioned hereinbefore and has sought reference to the High Court on several questions.

Before the questions involved in these appeals are considered, it is necessary to bear in mind the scope of the jurisdiction of the High Court in directing a reference on a question of law where the decision rests primarily on appreciation of facts. This question has, from time to time troubled the courts-both the High Courts and this court and several decisions have laid down the guiding principles in such a situation. Though not exhaustive, these may be referred to as illustrations.

In Sree Meenakshi Mills Ltd. v. CIT [1957] 31 ITR 28 (SC), Venkatarama Ayyar J., speaking for this court, said that findings on question of pure facts arrived at by the Tribunal were not to be disturbed by the High Court on a reference unless it appeared that there was no evidence before the Tribunal upon which they, as reasonable men, could come to the conclusion to which they had come; and this was so, even though the High Court would on the evidence have come to a conclusion entirely different from that of the Tribunal. The court laid down the following propositions: (a) Such a finding can be reviewed only on the ground that there was no evidence to support it or that it was perverse. (b) When a conclusion had been reached on an appreciation of a number of facts established by evidence, whether that was sound or not must be determined, not by considering the weight to be attached to each single fact in isolation, but by assessing the cumulative effect of all the facts in their setting as a whole. (c) Where an ultimate finding on an issue was an inference to be drawn from the facts, on the application of any principles of law, that would be a mixed question of law and fact, and the inference from the facts found would, in such a case, be a question of law. But where the final determination of the issue equally with the finding or ascertainment of the basic facts does not involve the application of any principle of law, an inference from the facts cannot be regarded as one of law. The proposition that an inference from facts was one of law was, therefore, correct in its application to mixed questions of law and fact, but not to pure questions of fact. In the case of pure questions of fact, an inference from the facts is as much a question of fact as the appreciation of the facts. Ayyar J. noted that the observations contained in some judgments of the English courts that what inference was to be drawn from proved facts was a question of law referred to this distinction. The position that emerges from the decided cases was that:

(i) When the point for determination was a pure question of law, such as construction of a statute or document of title, the decision of the Tribunal was open to reference to the court.

(ii) When the point for determination was a mixed question of law and fact, while the finding of the Tribunal on the facts found was final, its decision as to the legal effect of those findings was a question of law which could be reviewed by the court.

(iii) A finding on a question of fact was open to attack under reference under the relevant Act as erroneous in law when there was no evidence to support it or if it was perverse.

(iv) When the finding was one of fact, the fact that it is itself an inference from other basic facts will not alter its character as one of fact.

In Gouri Prasad Bagaria v. CIT [1961] 42 ITR 112, this court held that when the assessee's statement was believed in a particular case and the finding of the Tribunal was based on that, then there was obviously material on which the finding of the Tribunal could be based; and to seek for other material was tantamount to saying that a statement made by an assessee was not material on which a finding could be given. The Tribunal having believed the assessee's statement, that was an end of the matter in so far as that fact was concerned, and if the finding was based upon statement which was good material on which it could be based, no question of law really arose.

In I.C.I (India) P. Ltd. v. CIT [1972] 83 ITR 710, this court observed that the jurisdiction in the matter of reference could be exercised: (i) when the point for determination was a pure question of law such as construction of a statute or document of title; (ii) when the point for determination was a mixed question of law and fact. While, however, the finding on facts was final, its decision as to the legal effect of those findings was question of law. A finding on a question of fact was open to attack as erroneous in law when there was no evidence to support it or if it was perverse. Where, however, the finding was one of fact, the fact that it was an inference from other basic facts would not alter its character as one of fact.

In CIT v. Daulat Ram Rawatmull [1973] 87 ITR 349, this court held that the onus of proving that the apparent was not the real was on the party who claimed it to be so. It is not necessary to discuss other details of the facts involved in that case. It is sufficient to note, however, as was observed by this court that there should be some direct nexus between the conclusion of facts arrived at by the authority concerned and the primary facts upon which that conclusion was based. The use of extraneous and irrelevant material in arriving at that conclusion would vitiate the conclusion of fact because it is difficult to predicate as to what extent the extraneous and irrelevant material had influenced the authority in arriving at the conclusion of fact. Findings on questions of pure fact arrived at by the Tribunal were not to be disturbed by the High Court on a reference unless it appears that there was no evidence before the Tribunal upon which they, as reasonable men, could come to the conclusion to which they have come; and this was so even though the High Court would on the evidence have come to a conclusion entirely different from that of the Tribunal. In other words, such a finding could be reviewed only on the ground that there was no evidence to support it or that it was perverse. Further, when a conclusion had been reached on an appreciation of number of facts, whether that was sound or not must be determined, not by considering the weight to be attached to each single fact in isolation, but by assessing the cumulative effect of all the facts in their setting as whole. When a court of fact acted on a material partly relevant and partly irrelevant, it was impossible, this court observed, to say to what extent the mind of the court was affected by the irrelevant material used by it in arriving at its finding. Such a finding is vitiated because of the use of inadmissible material and thereby an issue of law arose. Likewise, if the court of fact based its decision partly on conjectures, surmises and suspicions and partly on evidence, in such a situation an issue of law arose.

In CIT v. S. P. Jain [1973] 87 ITR 370, this court noted that the questions referred to the High Court did not challenge the validity of the findings in that case given by the Tribunal, as the Tribunal had failed to take into account the relevant material on record in arriving at its finding and had further acted on inadmissible evidence and misread the evidence and based its conclusion on conjectures and surmises, the court could ignore the findings of the Tribunal and re-examine the issues arising for decision on the basis of the material on record. This court further reiterated that the High Court and this court had always the jurisdiction to interfere with the findings of the Appellate Tribunal if it appeared that either the Tribunal had misunderstood the statutory language, because the proper construction of the statutory language was a matter of law, or it had arrived at a finding based on no evidence, or where the finding was inconsistent with the evidence or contradictory to it, or it had acted on material partly relevant and partly irrelevant or where the Tribunal drew upon its own imagination and imported facts and circumstances not apparent from the record or based its conclusions on mere conjectures or surmises or where no person judicially acting and properly instructed as to the relevant law could have come to the determination reached. In all such cases, the findings arrived at were vitiated. This court further observed that " Any crystallization of the view of this court and its reluctance to interfere with the findings of fact should not make the Tribunal or the income-tax authorities smug in the belief that as the courts do not interfere with the findings which form the bed-rock upon which the law will be based, they can act on that assumption in finding facts or by their mere ipse dixit that they are findings of fact wish it to be so assumed irrespective of whether they are sustainable in law or on the materials on record ".

Now, in the instant case, as mentioned hereinbefore, the first three questions challenge the genuineness of the donations alleged to have been contributed by the Kalinga Foundation Trust alleged to have come into existence as a separate organisation at a public meeting in 1947 and the donations collected therefrom and the next question, i.e., question No. 4 challenges the finding that the dividend shown in the name of Kalinga Foundation Trust and the interest and loans in the name of Kalinga Foundation Trust did not belong to the assessee. The basic question is the next question whether the assessee had collected donations from the public. If the answer to that question is that it was from the public, the second aspect is whether the Revenue is bound to accept the decision of this court in S. P. Jain's case [1973] 87 ITR 370 as to the ownership of 39,000 shares, in view of the materials collected by the Income-tax Officer subsequent to the delivery of the judgment in this case.

Apparently, the identity of the donors to the trust has not been established and a large amount of materials have been collected subsequent to the decision of this court in S. P. Jain's case [1973] 87 ITR 370 which had been adverted to by the Income-tax Officer and to which our attention was drawn. These did not appear to have received consideration by the Tribunal.

We were taken through the evidence on record exhaustively about the foundation of the trust. We were taken through the evidence as to who were present at the time of the inauguration of the trust and whose evidence were there, there was a public meeting and whether this trust was separate from the other trust or not, whether particular persons were present or not; they are all set out in the orders of the Tribunal as well as the Income-tax Officer. It is not necessary at this stage for the purpose of disposing of these appeals to exhaustively discuss this.

The Revenue has pointed out to the Tribunal as appears in para. 22 at page 159 of the Tribunal's order that there was omission or adjustment of entries. The Tribunal has held that the Income-tax Officer had completely ignored the fact that the assessee has not made this contribution plus Rs. 1,29,331 which was one point at issue, out of his own funds but had deposited only the amount which he had collected from various persons and hence the question of showing this amount in the books of the assessee did not arise.

This is however begging the question; was there any material to show that the collectors had collected these amounts from various persons, if so, who were those persons and if so, whether they were capable of making these contributions ? This, in our opinion, is the core question. A significant fact has to be borne in mind that the trust kept the money with the Maharaja of Sonepur without earning any interest. Apart from any question whether there was any scope of any application of section 20 of the Trusts Act or not, such a conduct was highly improbable according to the Revenue. The explanation of the assessee about the nature and source of various cash credits was that these were loans from Kalinga Foundation Trust. It was claimed that there was a society of the name of Kalinga Foundation Trust. This society, it was maintained, had received large amounts as donations but for over a decade, these donations were lying in cash and were not invested anywhere. These were not even deposited in any bank. It was explained that it was only from 1958 that the society had started investing its funds with Shri Patnaik and the concerns with which he was associated. This, it was urged by the Revenue, was prima facie unacceptable for, inter alia, the following reasons:

(1) Funds exceeding a crore of rupees were claimed invariably to have been received in cash.

(2) These were also claimed to have remained uninvested and the cash was said to have been lying idle all these years.

(3) There was no tangible evidence of the existence of any part of these funds prior to 1958.

(4) Although the Society is claimed to have been in existence from 1947, it did not apply for exemption under the Income-tax Act.

(5) Although the funds were said to have been collected all over Orissa, yet there was no evidence of the money being brought from different places in Orissa to Cuttack.

(6) There was no evidence of any receipt issued to the alleged donors. No lists of donors were maintained or supplied.

These important factors were pointed out to the assessee and no explanation was offered by the assessee. The assessee had sought to give an appearance of truth to the explanation offered and relied on certain letters. But there appears to be no evidence as to who were the persons from whom the money was collected, how was the money received and how was the money invested? This in conjunction with other factors, in our opinion, raises a question whether the Tribunal bad acted without material evidence.

It is not necessary nor it is proper at this stage for this court to express any opinion whether on these facts what conclusion should properly be drawn but the basic question, in our opinion, on the first aspect of the matter as to whether the donations alleged were given by the assessee were the moneys raised by the Trust as donations from various people or not remains. That question, in our opinion, should be considered in its proper perspective but does not seem to have been done. This is the most material portion and in not appreciating the material portion and discussing the evidence in respect of the same, in our opinion, there was non-consideration of a relevant factor on a factual aspect and on this, the questions, firstly, whether the Tribunal's decision was perverse in the sense that no man instructed properly at law could have acted as the Tribunal did and, secondly, whether there was ignoring of all the materials and relevant facts in considering this aspect, do arise.

So far as the first aspect of the question is concerned, it is true that names of some collectors of money were given and some particulars were given but the persons from whom donations were collected, their particulars were not supplied nor examined nor were they produced to prove the genuineness of their donations and their capacity to make the donations. So the question remains whose money was donated and by whom ? There was evidence on record as to who has collected it to a certain extent, but no evidence on the other aspect. In our opinion, ignoring that fact is vital fact which influences the decision and a conclusion and must be judged in its proper perspective. Therefore, the questions which arise on this aspect are questions of law, on the principles enunciated by this court in the decisions noted hereinbefore.

The second aspect is about 39,000 shares of Kalinga Tubes Ltd. whether these belong to the assessee. The Revenue's contention was that Kalinga Tubes Ltd. was controlled by Shri B. Patnaik and Shri Loganathan and in 1954, the company was in need of capital and those two persons came to be introduced to Shri S. P. Jain. Early in 1956, the three groups considered the desirability of extending the business. This was converted into a public limited company. In 1956, when the company was still a private limited company, a request was made to the Controller of Capital Issues for raising the capital of the company and at a meeting held on March 29, 1958, a resolution was moved and the move of Jain group was defeated. To appreciate this contention, the assessee asserted that Messrs. Kalinga Tubes Ltd. needed funds for capital expansion. The company was converted into a public limited company and the articles of association were suitably amended. The company also made an application to the Controller of Capital Issues for the sanction of issue of further shares to the extent of Rs. 39,00,000 at the general meeting of the shareholders. The company decided to issue the new shares to the members of the public.

Regarding the ownership of 39,000 shares in Kalinga Tubes Ltd. issued in 1958, this involved determination of two issues: (a) whether the ostensible holders of these 39,000 shares were real owners or benamidars and if they were benamidars, who were the real holders ? The company was incorporated as a private limited company in 1950. From 1950 to 1954, it was controlled by Shri Biju Patnaik and Shri Loganathan. In 1954, the company was in need of capital and these two persons came to be introduced to Shri S.P. Jain. There was some agreement between Shri Jain and the existing shareholders. The memorandum of agreement was drawn up in July, 1954. According to this agreement, Patnaik, Loganathan and Jain group were to be equal shareholders of the company. Early in 1956, the three groups considered the desirability of extending the business and obtaining loan from the Industrial Finance Corporation. The Industrial Finance Corporation did not give loan to private limited companies and, therefore, the company was converted into a public limited company in January, 1957. In September, 1956, when the company was still a private company, a request was made to the Controller of Capital Issues for raising the capital of the company. It is further stated that at a meeting held on March 29, 1958, Shrimati Gyan Patnaik, wife of Shri B. Patnaik, moved a resolution providing that 39,000 shares should not be offered or allotted to the existing shareholders or to the public. Shri S. L. Aggarwal of the Jain group, however, moved a resolution which provided that the 39,000 shares be offered to the existing shareholders of the company in proportion to their shareholdings. The resolution further provided that if the offer was not accepted by the existing shareholders within 15 days, the offer would be deemed to have been declined.

It appears that on April 18, 1958, Shri S. P. Jain filed a suit. The suit was decided against the Jain group. But Shri S. P. Jain filed a complaint under sections 397, 398, 402 and 403 of the Indian Companies Act. An appeal was preferred from a single judge's judgment to the Division Bench. There was an appeal to this court. There is an observation in the judgment of Burman J. of the Orissa High Court to the following effect:

" In the present case, it is clear that the allotments of the said 39,000 shares to the seven persons were not in the interest of the company, because records, including the balance-sheets, show that even by 1960 share moneys of Rs. 39 lakhs were not realised from the said allottees. Although it was given out by those in the management of the company that the company was in urgent need of funds, the said allotments of 39,000 new shares did not, however, bring immediate funds to the company."

The Income-tax Officer was of the view that the facts suggested that the seven persons were benamidars of Shri Patnaik and whether they are so or not and what is the effect of the decision of this court on this point is another question. But these facts were not properly considered by the Tribunal to come to the conclusion as to whether 39,000 shares of Kalinga Tubes Ltd. belong to the assessee and not to the shareholders named. The details of this are in annexure " B " to the Income-tax Officer's order.

The Income-tax Officer has categorically found that Shri Mall was not assessed to income-tax as an individual. He was assessed as a member of a joint family on an income of Rs. 15,000 to Rs. 17,000. The total wealth of the family was about half a lakh. It was not possible to purchase shares of the face value of Rs. 9 lakhs on his own. The shares from 1959 to 1964 had gradually appreciated in value. In other words, even after deducting the loan incurred by acquiring these shares, the net worth of these shares during 1959 to 1967 was Rs. 2-1/2 lakhs to Rs. 7-1/2 lakhs. Shri Mall never filed his wealth-tax return which clearly showed that nowhere the shares were treated as his own. These and other factors taken in conjunction led the Income-tax Officer to the conclusion that the 39,000 shares belonged to Shri B. Patnaik. In that view of the matter, the materials gathered by the Revenue subsequent to the decision in S. P. Jain's case [1973] 87 ITR 370 (SC) on the aforesaid lines should have been appreciated and considered by the Tribunal.

In our opinion, therefore, on the principles enunciated by this court in several decisions mentioned hereinbefore, these questions as questions of law mentioned above do arise.

In our opinion, the High Court, in the facts and circumstances of the case, was in error in not directing a reference on the above named questions to the High Court under section 256(2) of the Act.

The judgment and order of the High Court are, therefore, set aside. We direct the Tribunal to send a statement of the case for the three years involved within six months of the date of receipt of this order on the questions mentioned hereinbefore to the High Court at Cuttack. Let the records be sent to the Tribunal immediately through the High Court. As the matter is very old, the reference, when made, should be disposed of as quickly as possible.

The costs of these appeals will abide by the ultimate order made in the reference.

Appeals allowed.

 

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