Controller Of Estate Duty, Karnataka, Bangalore v. Umesh Rudra
1979-01-15
A.D.KOSHAL, D.A.DESAI, P.N.BHAGWATI
body1979
DigiLaw.ai
(1) THIS petition for special leave to appeal against an order of the High court of Karnataka raises a question of interpretation of S. 10 of the Estate Duty Act, 1953. The deceased made a gift of his residential property to his wife on 27/11/1957 and on his death which occurred on 2/08/1963, the question arose whether the value of the residential property was liable to be included in the principal value of the estate passing on the death of the deceased under S. 10. The argument of the Revenue was that even after the gift, the deceased continued to reside with the wife and, therefore, it could not be said that the wife retained possession and enjoyment of the residential property to the entire exclusion of the deceased and hence S. 10 was attracted. Now there can be no doubt that on a proper interpretation of S. 10, the donee must retain possession and enjoyment of the property gifted to the entire exclusion of the donor, in order to repel the applicability of that section. But we do not see how in the present case it can at all be said that the wife did not retain possession and enjoyment of the residential house to the exclusion of the deceased, merely because the deceased in his capacity as husband continued to reside with the wife. S. 10 cannot possibly be construed in a manner which would require the husband who has gifted residential house to the wife to live separately from her, if he wants to escape from the mischief of that section. Such an interpretation would subvert family life and social order and would be contrary to morality and good sense. When the residential house is gifted to the wife and she obtains possession and remains in enjoyment of it, it cannot be said that the husband who resides with the wife, as in a happy family life every husband would be expected to do, is, on that account, in possession of the residential house or in enjoyment of it. It is the wife who is in possession and enjoyment of the residential house and the husband, by reason of the marital ties, continues to reside with the wife. We do not think that S. 10 would at all be attracted in such a case.
It is the wife who is in possession and enjoyment of the residential house and the husband, by reason of the marital ties, continues to reside with the wife. We do not think that S. 10 would at all be attracted in such a case. (2) WE find that this view has been taken by the Calcutta High court in Mrs. Shamsun Nehar Mansur v. Controller of Estate Duty, W. B. and Sunil Roy v. Controller of Estate Duty, Calcutta, the Andhra Pradesh High court in Mohammed Bhai v. Controller of Estate Duty, A. P., the Madras High court in Controller of Estate Duty v. Kamala Pandalai and the Karnataka High court in the judgment under appeal and it commends itself to us. We think that these High courts rightly refused to apply S. 10 to a case like the present where the husband has gifted the residential house to the wife and thereafter continued to reside with the wife in the residential house. The contrary view taken by the Allahabad High court in Bibi Ahmedi Begum v. Controller of Estate Duty, U. P. must be held to be erroneous. (3) WE accordingly reject the special leave petition.