CONTROLLER OF ESTATE DUTY, WEST BENGAL v. B. V. KAPADIA
1976-04-09
D.K.SEN, S.C.DEB
body1976
DigiLaw.ai
S. C. DEB, D. K. SEN ( 1 ) THE following question is involved in the Reference under Section 64 (1) of the Estate Duty Act, 1953: -"whether, on the fact and in the circumstances of the case, a sum of Rs. 75,000/- would be deemed to pass within the meaning of Section 10 of the Estate Duty Act, 1953?"the facts stated in the statement of the case are as follows: the deceased was a partner of Messrs. B. A. Brothers, Calcutta; on November 7, 1953 he made a gift of Rs. 1 lakh to his daughter by making entries in the books of the said firm; the donee received the gifted amount on November 7, 1953, and on the same day became a partner of the said firm by contributing Rs. 75,000/- as her capital out of the gifted amount; the donor had /4/ as share and the donee had /3/ as share in the said firm with effect from that date; and the donor died on October 18, 1960 while he was partner of the said firm. ( 2 ) RS. 75,000/- was included in the valuation of the estate of the deceased under Section 10 of the Estate Duty Act, 1953, hereinafter referred to as "the Act," by the Assistant Controller of Estate Duty whose order was sustained by the Appellate Controller of Estate Duty by following the decision of the Privy Council in the case of (1) Messrs. Clifford John Chick and Anr. v. The Commissioner of Stamp Duty, reported in 37 ITR 89 (ED ). ( 3 ) A further appeal was filed by the accountable person before the Appellate Tribunal. It was contended before the Tribunal on his behalf that Rs. 75,000/- did not pass on the death of the donor under Section 10 of the Act, for according to him, the donor had no right to possess or enjoy this amount and that Chick's case had no application to the fact and circumstances of the case. It was also contended on his behalf that the said capital contributed by the donee could not in law be the property of the firm and therefore the deceased could neither derive any benefit out of it nor could he exercise control over it as a partner of the firm.
It was also contended on his behalf that the said capital contributed by the donee could not in law be the property of the firm and therefore the deceased could neither derive any benefit out of it nor could he exercise control over it as a partner of the firm. The Tribunal, after discussing the law of partnership, quoting Lindley on Partnership (11th Edn.) at p. 406, citing Section 10 of the Act and distinguishing Chick's case, accepted those contentions and allowed the appeal in the following terms:"it is clear on a plain reading of the section itself that only such portion of a gifted property is deemed to pass on the donor's death on which he had retained possession and benefit to himself even after making the gift. In the instant case, there could be no possession of the donor over the donee's capital even if he was a partner along with the donee in the firm in which the capital was invested by the latter, because capital, as we have stated above, not at all the property of the partnership. Nor could the donor derive any benefit out of the capital, because whatever interest or benefit accrued upon this capital went wholly and exclusively to the donee. Thus the donor having neither got possession over the sum of Rs. 75,000/- nor having retained for himself any benefit therein, no part of the property, namely, the capital invested in the partnership firm Messrs. B. A. Brothers, Calcutta , could be deemed to pass on the death of the donor. The inclusion of the said amount of Rs. 75,000/- in the durable assets of the deceased is, therefore, erroneous and must be deleted. "3a. Section 10 of the Act read as follows:"property taken under any gift whenever made shall be deemed to pass on the donor's death to the extent that bonafide possession and enjoyment of it was not immediately assumed by the donee and thence forward retained to the entire exclusion of the donor or of any benefit to him by contract or otherwise. " ( 4 ) THE submissions of the learned Counsel Mr. Ajit Sengupta, appearing for the Revenue before us, are as follows: Though it was a valid and an outright gift, the enjoyment of Rs.
" ( 4 ) THE submissions of the learned Counsel Mr. Ajit Sengupta, appearing for the Revenue before us, are as follows: Though it was a valid and an outright gift, the enjoyment of Rs. 75,000/- was not immediately assumed by the donee because it was immediately contributed by the donee as the capital of the firm in which she became a partner with the donor. In any event, the donee did not thence forward retain this amount to the entire exclusion of the donor or of any benefit to him by contract or otherwise within the meaning of this section inasmuch as the capital contributed by the donee became the property of the firm and this amount therefore belonged to all the partners of the firm and accordingly the donor was in possession of this amount and had also enjoyed its benefit at the time of his death; and accordingly this amount should be deemed to have passed on the death of the donor in terms of Section 10 of the Act. ( 5 ) ACCORDING to Mr. N. C. Mukherjee, the learned Counsel for the respondent, the statements quoted above from the order of the Tribunal are the facts found by the Tribunal and therefore this reference is incompetent, for the Revenue has not questioned those findings on the ground of perversity. He cited the following observation from Chick's case at p. 100 of the report: -"where the question is whether the donor has been entirely excluded from the subject-matter of the gift, that is the single fact to be determined. If he has not been so excluded, the eye need look no further to see whether his non-exclusion has been advantageous or otherwise to the donee. " ( 6 ) THOUGH the question as to whether the donor was excluded by the donee from the subject-matter of the gift is primarily a question of fact, the Tribunal is to ascertain the primary facts and then to apply the legal principles involved in the expression thence forward retained to the entire exclusion of the donor or of any benefit to him by contract or otherwise", used in the second part of Section 10 of the Act. Therefore, that would make the question and its decision one of mixed law and fact.
Therefore, that would make the question and its decision one of mixed law and fact. Further, where the donee becomes a partner with the donor by ploughing back the gifted amount as his capital in the firm the question as to whether the donee thence forward retained the gifted amount to the entire exclusion of the donor or of any benefit to him by contract or otherwise must be determined on the law of partnership and therefore that would also make it a mixed question of law and fact. And these are exactly the questions with which we are concerned in this reference. Hence, the preliminary objection of Mr. Mukherjee must fail. ( 7 ) THERE is also no merits in the contention of Mr. Mukherjee that those statements of the Tribunal are its pure finding of facts, for the Tribunal has earlier said : "now, in this case what has been deemed to pass is the capital invested by the donee in the partnership, which, according to law, could not be the partnership property," and "the matter for our consideration is whether in terms of Section 10 of the Estate Duty Act, 1953, the donor retained possession over any part of the gifted money or reserved any benefit to himself by contract or otherwise so as to make the sum of Rs. 75,000/- leviable with the estate duty. Admittedly the investment of the said sum of Rs. 75,000/- in the firm is out of the gifted amount of Rs. 1,00,000/ -. In that firm the donor was a partner and continued as such until his death. Does this, therefore, mean the donor acquired a right over the capital invested by the donee?" ( 8 ) IT is abundantly clear that the concluding portion of the order of the Tribunal, on which reliance was paced by Mr. Mukherjee, was the conclusion arrived at by the Tribunal on the basis of the law of partnership and Section 10 of the Act as understood by the Tribunal and therefore the contention of Mr. Mukherjee must be rejected. ( 9 ) IT was then contended by Mr. Mukherjee that the capital contributed by the donee as her capital in the firm did not become the property of the firm but remained as the exclusive property of the donee.
Mukherjee must be rejected. ( 9 ) IT was then contended by Mr. Mukherjee that the capital contributed by the donee as her capital in the firm did not become the property of the firm but remained as the exclusive property of the donee. He cited the following observation relied on by the Tribunal from Lindlay's book: -"by the capital of a partnership is meant the aggregate of the sums contributed by its members for the purpose of commencing or carrying on the partnership business and intended to be risked by them in that business. The capital of a partnership is not therefore the same as its property. "but we reject his contention by following the law laid down by the Supreme Court on the partnership Act, 1932 in the case of (2) Addanki Narayanappa and Anr. v. Bhaskara Krishnappa, reported in AIR 1966 SC 1300 at p. 1303-1304 of the report, in the following terms: -"from a perusal of these provisions of the Partnership ct it would be abundantly clear that whatever may be the character of the property which is brought in by the partners when the partnership is formed or which may be acquired in the course of the business of the partnership it becomes the property of the firm * * * No doubt, since a firm has no legal existence, the partnership property will vest in all the partners and in that sense every partner has an interest in the property of the partnership. During the subsistence of the partnership, however, no partner can deal with any proportion of the property as his own. Nor can he assign his interest in a specific item of the partnership property to one. The whole concept of partnership is to embark upon a joint venture and for that purpose to bring in as capital money or even property including immovable property. Once that is done whatever is brought in would cease to be the exclusive property of the person who brought it in. It would be the trading asset of the partnership in which all the partners would have interest in proportion to their share in the joint venture of the business of partnership. The person who brought it in would, therefore, not be able to claim or exercise any exclusive right over any property which he has brought in, much less over any other partnership property.
The person who brought it in would, therefore, not be able to claim or exercise any exclusive right over any property which he has brought in, much less over any other partnership property. He would not be able to exercise his right even to the extent of his share in the business of the partnership. " ( 10 ) IT is to be noted here that Mr. Mukherjee has accepted the contention of Mr. Sengupta that this gift is an outright and a valid gift. Now it is the submission of Mr. Mukherjee that the donee had immediately assumed bonafide possession and enjoyment of the gifted amount and therefore this gift is not hit by the first part of Section 10 of the Act. It is also contention that this gift is not hit by the second part of the section and therefore we should answer the question in favour of the Respondent by following the decision of the Mysore High Court in the case of (3) Controller of State Duty, Mysore v. S. Aswathanarayana Setty and Anr. reported in 72 ITR 29, and the decisions of the Supreme Court in the cases of (4) Controller of Estate Duty, Madras v. C. R. Ramachandra Gounder reported in 88 ITR 448, and (5) Controller of Estate Duty, Madras v. N. R. Ramanathnam and Ors. reported in 91 ITR 1. ( 11 ) MR. Mukherjee has, however, rightly conceded before us that the principles laid down by the Privy Council in the case of (6) H. R. Munro and Ors. v. Commissioner of Stamp Duties, reported in 1934 0 AC 61 do not apply to the present case before us inasmuch as in Munro's case, the subject-matter of the gift was the property shorn of certain rights belonging to a pre-existing partnership in which the donor and the donee were partner and the gift was solely referable to the said partnership. Whereas, in our case the subject-matter of the gift was not the property shorn of any right belonging to any pre-existing partnership agreement between the donor and the donee and also the gifted amount is not at all referable to any such partnership agreement inasmuch as there was no such partnership between them when the gift was made as in Chick's case, which was followed by this Court in the case of (7) Rash Mohan Chatterjee and Anr.
v. Controller of Estate Duty, Wet Bengal reported in 52 ITR (ED) 1, and by the Supreme Court in the case of (8) Controller of Estate Duty, Madras v. Smt. Parvati Ammal, reported in 97 ITR 621, cited by Mr. Sengupta. ( 12 ) SECTION 10 of the Act came up for consideration before the Supreme Court in the case of (9) George Da Costa v. Controller of Estate Duty, Mysore, reported in 63 ITR 497. At p. 501 of the report Their Lordships observed:"the crux of the section 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 exclusive of the donor or of any benefit to him, by contract or otherwise. As a matter of construction we are of opinion that both these conditions are cumulative. Unless each of these conditions is satisfied, the property would be liable to estate duty under Section 10 of the Act. " ( 13 ) IT has been found by the Tribunal that the donee had contributed Rs. 75,000/- as her capital in the firm out of the gifted amount after it was received by her. Hence, there is no merit in the contention of Mr. Sengupta that the donee did not immediately assume bona fide possession and enjoyment of the gifted amount. Accordingly it must be held that this gift does not come within the mischief of the first part of Section 10 of the Act, as rightly contended by Mr. Mukherjee. Now, on the second part of this section it has been in George Da Costa's case, at pp. 501-02 of the report, as follows:"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. . . . In the context of the section the word 'otherwise' should, in our opinion, 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. . . .
. . . In the context of the section the word 'otherwise' should, in our opinion, 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. . . . As a matter of construction we hold that the words 'by contract or otherwise' in the second limb of the section will not control the words' to the entire exclusion of the donor in the first limb. ' in this state of the law the question now is whether the instant case before us is covered by the decisions relied on by Mr. Mukherjee or by the cases cited by Mr. Sengupta. " ( 14 ) IN S. A. Setty's case, (Supra), the subject-matters of the gifts were the shares in an existing firm and the profits accruing from these shares were paid to the donees, who were also in the management of the firm as pointed out by Mr. Justice Hegde at p. 32 of the report. And because of the nature of those gifts, it was held that after the shares were gifted, the donees thence forward retained those shares to the exclusion of the donor and of any benefit to him. Further, the donor's shares in the partnership and not his money in the firm were subject matter of the said gifts and therefore the donor could neither derive any benefit out of the shares gifted nor could be exercise any control over them inasmuch as those shares were not the properties of the firm but the properties of the donees who were exclusively entitled to receive the profits of the firm in accordance with their own shares out of which no benefit could at all accrue to the donor nor could he possess any right over them. Hence, the Mysore case does not apply to the present case, because the subject matter of this gift was not the share of the deceased in the firm but the money which belonged to him absolutely.
Hence, the Mysore case does not apply to the present case, because the subject matter of this gift was not the share of the deceased in the firm but the money which belonged to him absolutely. ( 15 ) THE facts in Ramchandra Gounder's case, (Supra), were briefly as follows : The deceased granted a tenancy-at-will of his house property to a firm in which he was a partner; thereafter he transferred the said property to his two sons; he also directed the firm to transfer Rs. 1,00,000/- from his account to his five sons by making credit entries in their names in the firm's book and it was done by the firm; and the donor died after the firm was dissolved. ( 16 ) WITH regard to the house property, it was held by the Supreme Court at p. 452 of the report that the benefit that the donor had as a partner of the firm was not a benefit referable to the said gift and as wholly unconnected with it. Thereafter, at p. 454, by following Setty's case (Supra), it was held by the Supreme Court that 'neither the property gifted to the donees nor the amount of Rs. 1,00,000/- gifted to the five sons could be included in the estate of the deceased. " ( 17 ) THE donees did not become the partners in the firm in Ramachandra Gounder's case. The gifted house property was subject to a tenancy-at-will granted to the firm and the benefit that the donor had dived out of it was wholly unconnected with the said gift which was also not at all referable to it. With regard to Rs. 1,00,000/-, the sons were the creditors of the firm and the donor, as a partner of the firm, was also indebted in that sum to his sons at the time of his death. Hence, this case does not apply to the instant case before us.
With regard to Rs. 1,00,000/-, the sons were the creditors of the firm and the donor, as a partner of the firm, was also indebted in that sum to his sons at the time of his death. Hence, this case does not apply to the instant case before us. ( 18 ) THE facts in Ramarathnam's case (supra), were as follows : The donor and the donees were the partners in a firm; the donor transferred certain amounts to the donee by making adjustment entries in the books of the firm against his credit balance in the firm; the gifted amounts remained in the firm and were utilized in the business; and the donor, died while he was a partner of the firm, Now, at p. 4 of the report, Their Lordships observed as followings:"the attention of the Tribunal was also drawn to the decision in the case of (7) Rash Mohan Chatterjee v. Controller of Estate Duty, 52 ITR (ED) 1, in which the distinguishing feature between Chick's case and Munro's case was pointed out, viz, that whereas in Munro's case the subject-matter of the gift was property shorn of the rights of the pre-existing partnership of Munro and his sons, in Chick's case there was an initial outright gift of the property without its having shorn of any rights. The Tribunal was of the view that the facts of the case under Appeal were similar to the facts of Munro's case and dissimilar to the facts of Chick's case and that, therefore, the decision in Munro's case governed the instant case. " ( 19 ) ACCORDINGLY, the appeal was dismissed by the Supreme Court by following its earlier decision in Ramchandra Gounder's case. In Ramrathnam's case there was a pre-existing partnership between the donor and the donees and the gift was referable to the said partnership, whereas in our case there was no such pre-existing partnership between the donor and the donee, as already stated. Further, Ramrathnam's case was directly covered by the ratio in Munro's case and, therefore, reliance on this decision was also mis-placed by Mr. Mukehrjee.
Further, Ramrathnam's case was directly covered by the ratio in Munro's case and, therefore, reliance on this decision was also mis-placed by Mr. Mukehrjee. ( 20 ) THE facts in Chick's case were, briefly, as follows : A father made a gift of his pastoral property to one of his sons; thereafter, they and another son of the donor entered into a partnership agreement to carry on the business of graziers and stock dealers; and the partnership agreement provided that the father was to manage the business which was to be carried on their respective holdings including the property gifted but the lands were to remain their own properties and they were entitled to deal freely with their own lands. ( 21 ) IN Chick's case, the Privy Council was concerned with the second part of Section 102 of the New South Wales Stamp Duties Act, 1920-36, which is substantially in the same terms with our Section 10 of the Act. At page 97 of the report, it was held by Their Lordships that "the partners and each of them were in possession and enjoyment of the property so long as the partnership subsisted". "viscount Simonds, speaking for the Board, also says this, at pp 97-98 of the report: -"in the first place, it is not disputed that the property was given outright by the deceased to his son. As was said by Dixon CJ in Commissioner of Stamp Duties v. Owens, 88 CLJR 67 : 'if ever there was gift of an estate in fee simple, carrying the fullest right known to the law of exclusive possession and enjoyment, surely this was such a gift. ' It follows that the decision of this Board in Munro v. Commissioner of Stamp Duties on which the appellants relied, has no application to the present case. It must often be a matter of fine distinction what is the subject-matter of a gift. If 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 he 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. This view of the section, which was reaffirmed in St.
This view of the section, which was reaffirmed in St. Aubyn v. Attorney General, upon a consideration of a similar section in a British Statute, need not be further elaborated ? ? ? ? ? ? Then it was contended that the sub-section had no operation because the partnership agreement was an independent commercial transaction for full consideration later than and in no way related to the gift, and was a mode of enjoyment by the donee of his property and an exercise by him of the possession of it. (These are the words of the appellant's second formal reason ). In this reason there are several elements. The partnership agreement was 'later' than the gift. This point was not pressed by counsel for the appellants. If possession and enjoyment are thenceforth' to be retained by the donee, it is clearly irrelevant that there is an interval between the dates when the donor is excluded and ceases to be excluded. " ( 22 ) THERE was an outright gift of the property in Chick's case and not the property shorn of certain rights belonging to the partnership in which the donor was a partner and therefore it was not covered by Munro's case where the gift was referable to a pre-existing partnership agreement, and that in Chick's case there was no such pre-existing partnership between the donor and the donees and the gifted property became an asset of the firm after the partnership was formed. Therefore, Munro's case was not affected by the vide of the section, whereas Chick's case came directly within the mischief of the second part of the section inasmuch as the donor was not "thenceforth" entirely excluded from possession and enjoyment of the property gifted. This distinction between Munro's case and Chick's case has also been pointed out by the Supreme Court in Parvati's case, (Supra ). ( 23 ) IN Parvati's case, the facts were as follows : The deceased made an outright gift to his five sons in equal shares of his house property in which he was carrying on a business of boarding and lodging; then he took the said property on lease from the sons and carried on the business as before; thereafter, he granted a sub-lease of the boarding house to a third party and after that he died.
And it was held that the entire value of the property was liable to be included in the principal value of the estate of the deceased as the property deemed to have been passed on his death under Section 10 of the Act. The principles emerging from Chick's case were also stated by Their Lordship of the Supreme Court at pp. 631-632 of the report in the following terms: -" (1)the deceased was not in fact excluded from the property, but as a partner enjoyed rights over it. (2)there was an initial outright gift of the property not of the property shorn of certain rights. (3)it was immaterial that the partnership agreement was later than the gift, since the section required that possession and enjoyment should thenceforth' be retained to the exclusion of the donor. (4)it was also immaterial that the partnership was 'an independent commercial transaction', and that the donor gave full consideration for his rights. If a donor give a donee a free hold and the donee gives the donor a lease, even at a full rent, the donor is not excluded from the property. (5)the question whether the partnership agreement was 'related' or 'referable' to the gift did not arise: the question is relevant only to the second limb of the clause. There is one other principle and that relates to gift of property shorn of certain rights belonging to the partnership in which the donor is a partner. In such a case the benefit remaining in the donor is referable to the partnership agreement and not to the gift. " ( 24 ) MR. Sengupta also cited the cases of (10) Controller of Estate Duty, Punjab v. Jai Gopal Mehra, a decision of the Full Bench of the Punjab and Hariyana High Court, reported in 85 ITR 175 (11) Controller of Estate Duty v. Thanwar Dass, a decision of the Full Bench of the Allahabad High Court, reported in 94 ITR 101; (12) Controller of Estate Duty v. N. K. Sanghi, a decision of the Rajasthan High Court, reported in 97 ITR 119; (13) Sekarlal Chunilal and Ors.
v. Controller of Estate Duty, Gujarat, a decision of the Gujarat High Court, reported in 98 ITR 610; (14) Radhabai Ramchand v. Controller of Estate Duty, Madras, a decision of the Madras High Court reported in 98 ITR 660 (15) Controller of Estate Duty, Madras v. S. M. M. Subramanian Chettiar, a decision of the Madras High Court, reported in 99 ITR 400; and (16) Controller of Estate Duty, Madras v. Ibrahim Gulam Hussain Currhimboy, a decision of the Madras High Court, reported in 100 ITR 320. ( 25 ) MR. Sengupta relied on some of these decisions in support of his contentions on the second part of Section 10 of the Act and the other cases for distinguishing them from the present case before us. But the above cases do not call for any discussion for. Chick's case followed in some of these cases and Munro's case was followed in the other cases and moreover the law on the second part of Section 10 of this Act is well-settled by the decision of this Court in Rash Mohan's case, (Supra), at p. 15 of the report, in the following terms: -" (A)in order to avoid the mischief of Section 10 of the Estate Duty Act, 1953, it must be established that the donee not only assumed bona fide possession and enjoyment of the property taken under the gift but also thence forward retained the said property to the entire exclusion of the donor or any benefit to him by contract or otherwise. (b)the single factor to be considered is whether the donor has been entirely excluded from the subject-matter of the gift. (c)if the donor has not been entirely excluded then it is not at all relevant to consider whether the non-exclusion of the donor has been advantageous to the donee or not. In other words, it is immaterial that the donee was receiving full consideration for what the donor was enjoying or possessing. (d)possession and enjoyment by the donor have to be judged in the light of the factual position alone. (e)the 'benefit' to him by contract or otherwise must, however, be based on enforceable rights. " ( 26 ) IN Parvati's case, the Supreme Court has approved the above principles laid down by this Court and those two cases were decided by following Chick's case.
(e)the 'benefit' to him by contract or otherwise must, however, be based on enforceable rights. " ( 26 ) IN Parvati's case, the Supreme Court has approved the above principles laid down by this Court and those two cases were decided by following Chick's case. The instant case before us is stronger than Chick's. Parvati's and Rash Mohan's case, for in Chick's case the donees were entitled to deal with the gifted property freely, and in Parvati's and Rash Mohan's case the donors took the gifted properties on lease from the donees whereas in our case Rs. 75,000/- not only became the property of the firm but also the donor, as one of the partners of the firm, remained in joint possession of the said amount along with the donee and had also derived benefit out of it till his death, because that amount was the trading asset and the property of the firm in view of the law laid down by the Supreme Court in Addanki Narayanappa's case, (Supra ). ( 27 ) NOW to summarise : There was no partnership agreement between the donor and the donee at the time the gift of Rs. 1,00,000/- was made; prior to this gift this amount was the exclusive property of the donor, on which there is no dispute before us; it is an outright and a valid gift; after receiving this amount, Rs. 75,000/- was contributed by the donee out of it as her capital in the firm and therefore Rs. 75,000/- ceased to be her exclusive property and she could not and did not exercise any exclusive right over it inasmuch as this amount became the property of the firm and also formed part of its trading asset and therefore the donor, as a partner, of the firm was in possession of and retained its control and had also derived benefit out of it. ( 28 ) IN the premises, it must be held that the donee did not thence forward retain possession and enjoyment of Rs. 75,000/- to the entire exclusion of the donor or of any benefit to him by contract or otherwise. Hence, it must be held that Rs.
( 28 ) IN the premises, it must be held that the donee did not thence forward retain possession and enjoyment of Rs. 75,000/- to the entire exclusion of the donor or of any benefit to him by contract or otherwise. Hence, it must be held that Rs. 75,000/- was liable to be included in the principal value of the estate of the deceased as property deemed to have been passed under Section 10 of the Act and accordingly we return our answer in the affirmative and in favour of the Revenue. ( 29 ) THE parties shall pay and bear their own costs of this reference. Sen J: I agree with the conclusions in the judgment just now delivered by my learned brother. I wish to emphasise the following reasons on which I base my conclusions. ( 30 ) SECTION 10 of the Estate Duty Act, 1953 with which we are concerned in the instant case has come up for consideration in the Courts in India on numerous occasions. The material part of the Section read as follows:"the property taken under any gift, whenever made, shall be deemed to pass on the donor's death to the extent that bonafide possession and enjoyment of it was not immediately assumed by the donee and thence forward retained to the entire exclusion of the donor or of any benefit to him by contract or otherwise. . . " ( 31 ) IN the case of (9) George Da Costa v. Controller of Estate Duty, reported in 63 Income-tax Reports, at page 497 the Supreme Court analyzed and interpreted this section. The observations of the Supreme Court at pages 501 and 502 of the report may be noted:"the crux of the section lies in two parts: (1)the donee must bonafide 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. As a matter of construction we are of opinion that both these conditions are cumulative. Unless each of these conditions is satisfied, the property would be liable to Estate Duty under Section 10 of the Act. . .
As a matter of construction we are of opinion that both these conditions are cumulative. Unless each of these conditions is satisfied, the property would be liable to Estate Duty under Section 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 for consideration or otherwise. . . . . . . . . " "in the context of the section the word 'otherwise' should in our opinion be construed ejusdem generis and it must be interpreted to mean some kind of legal obligation or some transaction enforceable by law or in equity which, though not in the form of contract, may confer a benefit on the donor. . . . . " "as a matter of construction we hold that the words 'by contract or otherwise' in the second limb of the section will not control the words "to the entire exclusion of the donor" in the first limb. In other words, in order to arrive at the conclusion, 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 and equity. " ( 32 ) THE subsequent decision of the Supreme Court in the case of (4) Controller of Estate Duty, Madras v. C. R. Ramchandra Gounder, reported in 88 Income-tax Reports at page 448 reiterates the above analysis of the section. There was a further observation in this case as follows:"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 illegally enforce against the donee. " ( 33 ) THE same construction has again been reiterated in the latest Supreme Court decision in the case of (8) Controller of Estate Duty, Madras v. Smt. Parvati Ammal, reported in 97 ITR at page 621.
" ( 33 ) THE same construction has again been reiterated in the latest Supreme Court decision in the case of (8) Controller of Estate Duty, Madras v. Smt. Parvati Ammal, reported in 97 ITR at page 621. ( 34 ) IN applying the said Section 10 in cases where possession or enjoyment or benefit arising from property gifted have (been either initially retained by the donor or where such properties has found its way back from the donee to the donor directly or through a partnership, Courts in India have drawn inspiration from two important decisions of the Privy Council, respectively in the case of (6) H. R. Munro and Ors. v. Commissioner of Stamp Duties, reported in 1934 Appeal Cases at page 61 and (1) Clifford John Chick and Anr. v. Commissioner of Stamp Duties, reported in 37 ITR at page 89. ( 35 ) IN the earlier case, i. e. , Munro's case, the donor entered into a partnership at will with his children in respect of a business carried no by him as a grazer in vast areas of land owned by him in New South Wales. Subsequently, the land was transferred in specific portions by the donor to his said children subject to the partnership agreement and on the understanding that any partner could withdraw and work his land separately. Later, there was a formal partnership agreement between the parties which inter alia, provided that during the life-time of the donor, one of his children withdraw from the partnership. ON the death of the donor the question arose whether the grazing land transferred by the donor to his children should be deemed to pass on his death. ( 36 ) THE statue involved in this case was the Stamp Duties Act, 1920-1932 (New South Wales) the relevant section whereof was in pari matria with Section 10 of the Estate Duty Act, 1953. ( 37 ) THE Judicial Committee based their decision on the finding of fact that the partnership at will continued uninterrupted till the formal agreement of partnership was executed and held that the partnership was entitled to the use of the land during its subsistence and transferor the land by the donor to the donee was subject to this right.
( 37 ) THE Judicial Committee based their decision on the finding of fact that the partnership at will continued uninterrupted till the formal agreement of partnership was executed and held that the partnership was entitled to the use of the land during its subsistence and transferor the land by the donor to the donee was subject to this right. In his judgment Lord Tomlin observed as follows:"it is unnecessary to determine the precise nature of the right of the partnership at the time of the transfer. It was either a tenancy during the tenure of the partnership or a licence coupled with an interest. In either view, what was comprised in the gift was. . . . the property shorn of the right which belonged to the partnership, and upon this footing it is in Their Lordship's opinion plain that the donee in each case assumed bonafide possession and enjoyment of the gift immediately upon the gift and thence forward retained it to the exclusion of the donor. Further, the benefit which the donor has as a member of the partnership in the right to which the gift was subject was not. . . . . . . . . a benefit referable to the gift. It was referable to the agreement of 1909 and nothing else and was not therefore such a benefit as contemplated by the section in question. " ( 38 ) IN the later case, i. e. , Chick's case the property in question was also pastoral land which was transferred by the donor to one of his sons, without any reservation or qualification. Subsequently, the donor entered into a partnership with the donee and another son of the donor. The business of this partnership was that of graziers and stock dealers. By agreement the donor became the manager and his decision was to be final and conclusive. Further, the agreement was that the business would be carried on in the holdings of the partners and lands held by the partners at the date of the agreement or acquired afterwards should be and remain the sole property of such partner and should not be taken into account or deemed to be an asset of the partnership. Any partner would have the right to deal with such land as he might think fit.
Any partner would have the right to deal with such land as he might think fit. ( 39 ) IN terms of the above agreement the property which had been donated by the donor to his son used by the partnership. On the death of the donor the question arose whether this land could be deemed to pass. ( 40 ) IT was not disputed that in the facts there was an outright gift. But the Privy Council decided the case on the sole consideration viz. was the donor excluded from the property? The other contentions mooted before the Privy Council namely that the partnership agreement was an independent commercial transaction for the other consideration, or that partnership agreement was in no way related to the gift, or that it was a mode of enjoyment by the donee of his own property were held to be irrelevant. Viscount Simond in his judgment observed at page 100:"where the question is whether the donor has been entirely excluded from the subject-matter of the gift, that is the single fact to be determined. If he is not so excluded, the eye need look no further to see whether his non-exclusion has been advantageous or otherwise to the donee?. It may be pertinent in some cases to inquire whether the benefit derived by the donor is one that impairs or detracts from the donee's enjoyment of the gift? ? It is not a relevant consideration where the question arises under the first limb of the sub-section and is whether the donor has been entirely excluded from the subject-matter of the gift " ( 41 ) THE principles laid down in Munro's case and Chick's case have been applied by the Supreme Court in the following decisions where a partnership was involved. The first case is Gounder's case 88 ITR page 488 (supra ). The facts in this case have been discussed in the judgment of my learned brother. It is to be noted that in this case the Supreme Court follows the principle laid down in Munro's case and held that there was unequivocal transfer of property and that the Revenue could not establish that the deceased was not entirely excluded from the property. The Supreme Court further found and held in this case that the donor had only the rights in the house property viz.
The Supreme Court further found and held in this case that the donor had only the rights in the house property viz. , ownership and right of termination of the firm's tenancy and both these rights were transferred to the donee. The Supreme Court concluded that the benefit which the donor had received via the partnership which was a tenant was not referable to nor connected with the gift. In respect of the money transferred in the case the same principles were applied. It is to be noted that in Gounder's case the donees i. e. , sons of the donor never became partner of the firm. ( 42 ) THE other case is (5) Commissioner and Controller of Estate Duty, Madras v. N. R. Ramarathnam and others, which is reported in 91 ITR at page 1. In this case the facts were that the deceased, his three sons and one daughter were partners in the firm which carried on business in money-lending. The deceased transferred to his sons and daughters various amounts by adjustment entr4ies in the books of the firm against his credit balance. The amounts remained in the firm till the death of the deceased who remained a partner till that time. The Supreme Court held following Munro's case and Gounder's case that these amounts could not be deemed to pass on death. ( 43 ) IT seems that the subject-matter of the gift, namely, the amounts of money were considered to be already impressed with the rights of the partnership and those of the partners within the frame work of the partnership the gifts were transferred unequivocally and no further control was retained or assumed by anybody apart from the control or benefit which was already there before the gift. Therefore, on such facts the principles in Munro's case were applied there. ( 44 ) IN this instant case, the facts are more in line with Chick's case than in Munro's case. In this case, the gift was outright and unequivocal, but then the donee chose to give up exclusive control over the subject-matter of the gift by bringing back the same into the partnership in which the donor retained his interest. This right the donor did not have at the time of the making of the gift.
In this case, the gift was outright and unequivocal, but then the donee chose to give up exclusive control over the subject-matter of the gift by bringing back the same into the partnership in which the donor retained his interest. This right the donor did not have at the time of the making of the gift. Therefore by following the principles in Chick's case as applied by the Supreme Court, the question has to be answered in favour of the Revenue. Question answer in favour the Revenue.