Judgment :- MISHRA J. The questions referred to this court are "(1) Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of the case, the Appellate Tribunal was justified in holding that the deduction under section 5(1)(iva) of the Wealth-tax Act, 1957, is to be allowed in full in the hands of the assessee ? (2) Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of the case, the Appellate Tribunal was ustified in holding that the deduction under section 5(1)(iva) of the Wealth-tax Act, 1957, is to be allowed in the hands of the assessee who is only a partner in the firm which owns the agricultural land without having regard to the provisions of sections 14 and 15 of the Partnership Act, whereunder no partner can point to any part of the assets of the partners or any allotment of share in such property as belonging to him ?" * The legal position in this behalf has been considered by a Bench of this court, of which one of us (Mishra J.) was a member, in R. Venkatavaradha Reddiar v. CWT.
The judicial consensus as noticed by the Bench are as follows (at page 90) "(1) A firm has no legal existence and as such it cannot hold any property ; (2) It is the partners, who own the partnership property as such ; (3) The partners alone should have the benefit of the exemption under section 5(1)(iv), when their individual assessments are taken up to the extent of their respective shares in the net wealth of the partnership firm ; (4) The mere fact that a partner cannot claim to be entitled to any portion of the property owned by a firm as exclusively belonging to him will not completely disentitle him from seeking the benefit of exemption under section 5(1)(iv) of the Act, so long as he is the owner of the house property even though as a partner in a firm ;(5) For the purposes of the exemption under section 5(1)(iv), it is not necessary that the partner should be able to say that the property or any specific part thereof exclusively belongs to him." * Learned counsel for the Revenue has, however, pointed out that the assessee who is a partner in a coffee estate has valued only the interest in the partnership and it is not known whether for some other assets, the assessee claimed exemption without adverting to the limit as prescribed under section 5(1)(iva) of the Wealth-tax Act and a proper realisation of tax from the assessee is not possible We have gone through the records which are made available to us : We have, however, not found any foundational fact for the examination whether in view of section 5(1)(iva) the assessee has been rightly allowed the exemption in respect of the assessee's share in the agricultural land of the firm to the extent of his share. Since there are no foundational facts, it is not possible to enter into this controversy. Answer to the questions referred to us, however, is available in the judgment of this court in Venkatavaradha Reddiar's. The reference is answered accordingly.