Section 171 of the Income Tax Act, 1961 defines the partition of HUF and deals with the provisions of assessment after its partition.
The
Partition of HUF should be recognized as per the Income Tax Act and not as per
the Hindu Law. Section 6 of the Hindu Succession Act would govern the rights of
the parties but insofar as income-tax law is concerned, the matter has to be
governed by section 171(1) of the Income Tax Act, 1961.The Hindu Law does not
require that the property in every case be partitioned by metes and bound or
physically into different portions to complete a partition. But the Income Tax
Law introduced certain additional conditions of its own to give effect to the
partition under section 171. Thus a transaction may be treated as severance of
status under Hindu Law but not a partition under 1961 Act as physical division
of property is necessary under 1961 Act.
What is the Partition
Partition is the severance of the
status of Joint Hindu Family, known as Hindu Undivided Family under tax laws.
Under Hindu Law once the status of Hindu Family is put to an end, there is
notional division of properties among the members and the joint ownership of
property comes to an end. However, for an effective partition, it is not
necessary to divide the properties in metes and bounds. But under tax laws for
an effective partition division by metes and bounds is necessary.
Partition
means-
Case
|
Partition |
Where the property admits of a physical division |
a physical division of the property, but a physical
division of the income without a physical division of the property producing
the income shall not be deemed to be a partition; or |
Where
the property does not admit
of a physical division |
then such division as the property admits of, but a
mere severance of status shall not be deemed to be a partition. |
An
HUF can be partitioned both as regards to persons and as regards to property.
This partition can be of two types:
[1] Partial partition.
[2] Total or complete partition;
The
Partition of HUF can be categorized as under:-
[1] Partial Partition
Partition could be partial also. It
may be partial vis-a-vis members, where some of the members go out on
partition and other members continue to be the members of the family. It may be
partial vis-a-vis properties where, some of the properties are divided
among the members other properties continue to be HUF properties. Partial
partition may be partial vis-a-vis properties and members both.
Partial partition is not recognized under the Act
Tax Laws do not recognize partial partition of
property or/and persons after 30.03.1978 on insertion of sub-section (9) to
Section 171 of the Income Tax Act. This restriction was put to avoid creation
of multiple HUFs which was a misuse. For
instance, say one coparcener is getting certain property in the HUF via setting
apart of that asset of HUF on the condition that no further claim in properties
will be made by him, is nothing but a partial partition and not a family
arrangement and this situation is not recognized in the Act.
Tax implication of Partial Partition of HUF
Section 171, as originally enacted,
applied to total as well as partial partition. However, sub-section (9)
inserted by Finance (No 2) Act, 1980 recognises only complete partition. A
Partial partition took place after 31.12.1978 is not recognized under the
Income Tax Act, 1961 (Section 179(9). Thus partial partition effected after
this date is not given effect to by the Assessing Officer even though such
partition may be legal as per Hindu Law. Hence, for the purpose of income-tax
assessment, the HUF shall be deemed to continue notwithstanding the partial
partition and the income from all properties shall continue to be assessed in
the hands of erstwhile HUF. Therefore even after the Partial partition, the
income of the HUF shall be liable to be assessed under the Income-tax Act as if
no partition had taken place.
Treatment in case of partial partition took place
after 31.12.1978 [Section 171(9)]
Sub-section
(9) of section 171 is an exception to sub-section (1) of section 171. For the
applicability of sub-section (9) of section 171, two pre-requisites are
essential. Firstly, the partial partition should have taken place after 31.12.1978
and secondly, such partial partition must have taken place in a HUF which
hitherto before was assessed as a HUF.
Setting apart of certain assets of HUF in favour of certain coparceners on a condition that no further claim in properties will be made by them, is a partition under Income Tax Act
Setting apart of certain assets of HUF in favor of
certain coparceners on the condition that no further claim in properties will
be made by them, is nothing but a partial partition and not a family
arrangement and not recognized in view of section 171(9) of the Act.
Consequences of Partial Partition
Notwithstanding anything contained in the
foregoing provisions of this section, where a partial partition has taken
place among the members of an HUF after 31.12.1978, then—
(i)
no claim that such partial partition has taken place shall be inquired into under
section 171(2);
(ii)
no finding regarding partition shall be recorded under section 171(3);
(iii)
such family shall continue to be liable to be assessed under this Act as if no
such partial partition had taken place;
(iv) each member or group of
members of such family immediately before such partial partition and the family
shall be jointly and severally liable for any tax, penalty, interest, fine or
other sum payable under this Act by the family.
NOTE
Liability of any
member or group of members aforesaid shall be computed according to the portion
of the joint family property allotted to him or it at such partial partition.
[2] Total or
Complete Partition
Assets
of HUF are physically divided. In total partition all the members cease to be
members of the HUF and all the properties cease to the properties belonging to
the said HUF.
Tax Implication of Full Partition of HUF
After
the Partition, the assessment of HUF shall be made as per the provisions of
Section 171 of the Income Tax Act and order to be passed by the Assessing Officer.
Person entitled to share on partition
Following
persons can claim share on partition:
Case
|
Persons
who can claim share on partition |
Any
|
Coparceners
|
Any
|
A
child in the womb of his mother at the time of partition |
Partition
between sons after the death of father |
Mother
- gets an equal share to that of son |
Wife
- gets an equal share to that of a son (apart from that of husband) |
Partition
between father and sons |
NOTE
A child in the
womb of his mother is entitled to share of HUF property, on partition.
How a partition can be effected and what is its effect
To constitute a partition all that
is necessary is a definite and unequivocal indication of intention by a member
of a joint family to separate himself from the family. What form such,
intimation, indication or representation of such interest should take would
depend upon the circumstances of each case. A further requirement is that this
unequivocal indication of intention to separate must be to the knowledge of the
persons effected by such declaration. A review of the decisions shows that this
intention to separate may be manifested in diverse ways. It may be by notice or
by filing a suit. Undoubtedly, indication or intimation must be to members of
the joint family likely to be affected by such a declaration.
Modes of Partition
A partition can be made by a
definite, unambiguous declaration of intention by any member to separate
himself from the family. If this is done it would amount to division of status
whatever mode may be used. Partition may be effected:
(a)
By institution of suit;
(b)
By submitting the dispute as to division of the properties to arbitration;
(c)
By agreement to divide the property;
(d)
By conduct or by a demand for a share in the properties;
(e)
By metes and bounds.
Claim of partition by any coparcener
It is mandatory that any
member of the HUF must make a claim of partition at the time of making
assessment under section 143/144 of the Income Tax Act, 1961
Distribution of assets at the time of partition of HUF
·
On
a full partition of the assets of a Hindu Undivided Family (HUF), all the
coparceners get their shares in the property.
·
After
the amendment in 2005, of Section 6 of Hindu Succession Act, 1956, daughters
are also made coparceners and their rights are equal to those of the sons and
therefore sons and daughters get the same share in the HUF property on
partition.
·
It
is not only all the living members but also the child in the womb which is born
subsequently entitled to get share in the HUF property.
·
When
partition takes place between father and his child, the mother also gets an
equal share that of a son. Likewise, on partition of the HUF property after
death of the father, mother gets a shares equal to the share of a son/daughter.
·
The
share of each branch of the family will be per stripe and then it will be
distributed between the coparceners of the branch per capital.
For Example :
Suppose Mr. A has an HUF
having his wife W and sons B and C as well a married daughter D. Both the sons
are married and have two children each. On a partition of the assets of the HUF
each one of A, W, B, C and D will get 1/5 share in the HUF assets.
The shares of B and C in
the HUF assets will be further shared amongst themselves and their children
equally. So each one will get 1/15 share of the HUF assets (1/3 of 1/5 share
allotted on the partition).
Rights to be claimed by the coparceners
There is no provision under
the Income Tax Act, 1961 regarding the equal or unequal right in share during
the partition of HUF. The right of the coparceners in the share during division
is governed by Section 6 of the Hindu Succession Act, 1956.
Partition
can only be claimed by a coparcener. But, when there is a partition of HUF, the
following persons are entitled to a share in the assets of the HUF:
(i)
All coparceners.
(ii)
Mother is entitled to a share equal to the share of a son in case of death of
the father.
(iii)
Wife gets a share equal to that of a son if a partition takes place between her
husband and his sons. She enjoys this share separately even from her husband.
(iv)
A son in the womb of the mother at the time of the partition.
Right of minor to claim partition
A
minor can claim partition through his guardian.—[Apoorva Shantilal Shah v. CIT
(1983) 141 ITR 558 (SC)]
Physical division by metes and bounds is necessary
Hindu
Law does not require division of joint family property physically or by metes
and bounds. However, partition as defined under Explanation to Section 171
of the Act means—
(i) where the property admits of a
physical division, a physical division of the property, but a physical division
of the income without a physical division of the property producing the income
shall not be deemed to be a partition; or
(ii) where the property does not
admit of a physical division, then such division as the property admits of but
a mere severance of status shall not be deemed to be a partition).
Partition of HUF property can be done either through family settlement or through a partition deed
Partition
of HUF property can be done either through family settlement or through a
partition deed. Family settlement does not attract stamp duty and is not
required to be registered, but partition deed attracts stamp duty and must be
registered. To avoid expenses inherent with “Partition deed” family settlement
is preferred, but must be ensured that:-
· The
family settlement is bona fide, for fair and equitable division of property
amongst the members and to resolve family disputes.
· It
must be voluntary and without any force, threat, coercion, misrepresentation
and fraud.
· Fair
and equitable family settlement, though unstamped and unregistered, is final
and binding on the family members.
Must have assessed as HUF
once
For recognition of a HUF to
be partitioned under Section 171 of the Income Tax Act, 1961 it is necessary
that the HUF must have once assessed as a HUF. Otherwise, section 171 shall be
inapplicable.
Inquiry by the Assessing Officer regarding the partition of HUF
Where, at the time of
making an assessment u/s 143 or 144, it is claimed by or on behalf of any
member of a Hindu family assessed as undivided that a partition, has taken
place among the members of such family, the Assessing Officer shall make an
inquiry thereinto after giving notice of the inquiry to all the members of the
family.
Satisfaction of Assessing
Officer that the total partition has taken place
Where the Assessing Officer
is satisfied upon the findings that the total partition of HUF has taken place
during the previous year then he shall proceed for the computation of income.
There should be actual partition and not fictional to avoid tax
Partition of a HUF has to
be done in such a way that it gives a legal finding to the Assessing Officer
that a complete partition has actually been taken place since then only he is
authorized to compute the income of the HUF as if the partition has taken in
the manner as described under section 171.
Partition of HUF should be recognized as per the Income Tax Act and not as per the Hindu Law
Section 6 of the Hindu
Succession Act would govern the rights of the parties but insofar as income-tax
law is concerned, the matter has to be governed by section 171(1) of the Income
Tax Act, 1961.
Requirement of registered partition
It is not necessary to
effect partition by a written partition deed. It can be effected orally and be
acted upon. Even a partition of an immovable property can be by an oral
agreement. In the case of Popatlal Devram v. CIT (1970) 77 ITR 1013 (Orissa)
wherein it was held by the Hon’ble orrissa High Court that Law is well settled
that a partition of the joint family properties can be effected by an oral
agreement irrespective of the value of the property.
Section 17 of the
Registration Act, 1908 talks only when immovable property is transferred.
Therefore, family settlement without registration is okay if no immovable
property is involved. However, in respect of transfer of immovable property
separate registered documents only for immovable property can be made.
Concept of notional partition is non-existent under
the Income-tax Act
The concept of notional partition
is non-existent under the Income-tax Act. The Income-tax Act recognizes only an
actual partition and not the notional partition.
Income-tax Act recognizes only an actual partition and
not the notional partition
When a Hindu male dies on or after
17.06.1956 having at the time of his death an interest in coparcenary property,
leaving behind a female heir of the class one category, then his interest in
the coparcenary property shall devolve by succession and not by survivorship.
The interest of the deceased will be carved out over devolution, though there
is no actual partition. Such an act is considered as a notional partition under
the Hindu Law. The concept of notional partition is non-existent under the
Income-tax Act. The Income-tax Act recognizes only an actual partition and not
the notional partition.
What is notional partition
When a Hindu male dies on or after
17.06.1956 having at the time of his death an interest in coparcenary property,
leaving behind a female heir of the class one category, then his interest in
the coparcenary property shall devolve by succession and not by survivorship. The
interest of the deceased will be carved out over devolution, though there is no
actual partition. Such an act is considered as a notional partition under the
Hindu Law.
Physical division of property by way of book entries
not permissible
Where a property is capable of
physical division, the partition must be made by physical division only. If the
property of the HUF does not admit of physical division, the property must be
so physically divided as much permits. For example, it is not expected that the
utility of the property is lost by compelling a physical partition and in such
a case, the property may be divided physically to the extent possible.
This
is rule in section 179 to make a valid claim for recognising the partition for
Income-tax purposes.
Entries showing division of the
property in books of account may be good evidence of a partition more
particularly in cases where the property may not be capable of physical
division.
Therefore, where credit balances in
capital account in books of firm in which assessee HUF was a partner is
partitioned, it was held that there was a valid partition.—[Motilal Shyam
Sunder v. CIT (1972) 849 ITR 186(All)]
An asset which is not capable of
physical division can be partitioned by making entries in books.
It was held that an asset which is
not capable of physical division can be partitioned by making entries in books.
Here, entries relating to partition were passed in books of HUF and not the
partnership firm where HUF was a partner and that would be satisfactory
evidence of the partition of such an asset. The partition was held valid.—[CIT
v. K. G. Ramakrishnier (1963) 49 ITR 608 (Mad)]
Allotment of share on partition
On
a partition between the members of a joint family, the shares are allotted as
under:—
S.
No. |
Particulars
|
Allotment
of share on partition |
(i)
|
On a partition in an HUF which includes father, mother and sons, |
mother
has no right to claim partition but when a partition is actually effected she
takes a share equal to the sons. |
(ii)
|
On a partition between a father and his sons where
mother is not living, |
each son takes a share equal to that of the father.
Suppose there are four sons, each son will take 1/5 share of the property. |
(iii)
|
If
joint family consists of brothers |
they
take equal shares on a partition. |
(iv)
|
Each
branch takes per stripe as regards every other branch |
but members of each branch take per capita as
regards each other. |
(v)
|
The daughter whether married or unmarried |
With effect from 09.09.2005, daughter whether
married or unmarried shall also be entitled to equal share on partition as
she has also been treated as coparcener like son. |
Partition of property under Hindu law and
under Income tax Act are different on two accounts:-
(a)
For partition under Hindu law division of the
property by metes and bounds is not necessary, but for partition recognized
under Income tax Act, division of property by metes and bounds is necessary.
(b)
Partial partition of HUF property, either property
specific or member specific is valid under Hindu law, but under Income tax Act,
1961 it is not recognized.
Difference between partition under the Hindu Law and
that under the Income-tax Act
There is a difference between a
partition under Hindu Law and a partition recognised under the Income-tax Act.
Though the concept of partition is the same under Hindu law and tax laws, in
two respects, recognition of partition under tax laws differs from that under
Hindu Law.
S.
No. |
Partition
under Hindu Law |
Partition under section 171 of
Income Tax Act, 1961 |
|
1.
|
Partition is a process by which a joint enjoyment is
transformed into an enjoyment in severalty. Each one of sharers had an
antecedent title and therefore no conveyance is required. CED v. Kantilal
Trikamlal (1976) 105 ITR 92 (SC). |
Section 171 raises a legal fiction that an HUF, once
assessed shall be deemed to continue unless a finding of partition has been
given under this section. Consequently, unless a finding is recorded under
section 171 that a partition has taken place, the income from the properties
would be included in the total income of the family by virtue of sub-section
(1) of section 171. (Kaloomal Tapeshwari Prasad v. CIT (1982) 133 ITR 690
(SC)) |
|
2.
|
FOR RECOGNITION OF PARTITION UNDER HINDU LAW
DIVISION OF PROPERTIES BY METES AND BOUNDS NOT IS NECESSARY The Hindu Law does not require that the property in
every case be partitioned by metes and bounds or physically into different
portions to complete a partition. In other words, for recognition of
partition under Hindu Law division of properties by metes and bounds is not
necessary. Once shares of each share holder are defined, the partition is
complete. It is not necessary that it should be by metes and bounds. |
HOWEVER,
FOR RECOGNITION OF PARTITION UNDER TAX LAWS, DIVISION OF PROPERTIES BY METES
AND BOUNDS IS NECESSARY The Income Tax Law introduced certain additional
conditions of its own to give effect to the partition under section 171. For
recognition of partition under tax laws, division of properties by metes and
bounds is necessary. It was held that where the assets were not divided by
metes and bounds, the partition could not be recognised for the purposes of
the Income-tax Act. [CIT v. Venugopal Inani (1999) 239 ITR 514(SC)] |
|
3.
|
Even
a single coparcener can separate himself from rest of the family. |
It
is to be noted that section 171 applies to those HUFs which have been
assessed under the Act. So, in my opinion, partial partition can still take
place where HUF has not been assessed without invoking this section. |
|
4.
|
UNDER HINDU LAW PARTIAL PARTITION IS RECOGNISED
Partition under Hindu Law, can be total or partial. In total partition all
the members cease to be members of the HUF and all the properties cease to be
properties belonging to the said HUF. For example, joint family business
could be divided while retaining other properties as joint property. |
However, in view of provisions of Section 171(9) of
Income-tax Act, 1961, partial partitions will not be recognised for tax
purposes. Section 171, as applicable from assessment year 1980-81, recognises
only complete partition. Explanation to this section recognizes only
partition by metes and bounds i.e. the physical division of property is
condition precedent. So, there is a departure from Hindu law. Even a decree
of court would not be sufficient or binding on Assessing Officer unless
physical division takes place. ITO v. N K Sarada Thamptty (1991) 187 ITR
696 (SC); Narender Modi v. CIT (1976) 105 ITR 109 (SC). |
|
5.
|
Where
there is partition between different branches, the respective branches
continue to remain in joint |
Partition can be effected on demand of coparceners
or suo moto by the father in his superior power even without the
consent of sons. Such right can also be exercised even where sons are minors.
Apoorva Shantilal Shah (HUF) Seth Gopaldas (HUF) v. CIT (1983) 141
ITR 558 (SC). |
|
6.
|
Since partition can be effected between coparceners
only, a family with sole coparcener is not amenable to partition. V. V. S.
Natarajan v. CIT 111 ITR 539 (Mad); CIT v. Satpal Bansal 162 ITR 582
(P&H)(FB) |
In case of CIT v. Maharani Rajlaxmi Devi 224 ITR
582 SC, the court has held that recording of partition under section 171
is necessary even in case is falling under section 6 of the Hindu Succession
Act. It observed: “it must be held that though for the purpose of HUF,
section 6 of the Hindu Succession Act, would govern the rights of the parties
but insofar as income-tax law is concerned, the matter has to be governed by
section 171(1).” |
|
7.
|
|
It is mandatory that assessee must make a claim of partition at the time of making assessment under section 143/144. If such claim is made, the Assessing Officer is required to make an enquiry into such claim after giving notice to all the
members. After making enquiry,
Assessing Officer is required to
record a finding accepting/ rejecting
the claim. |
|
The Partition of HUF should be
recognized as per the Income Tax Act and not as per the Hindu Law. Section 6 of
the Hindu Succession Act would govern the rights of the parties but insofar as
income-tax law is concerned, the matter has to be governed by section 171(1) of
the Income Tax Act, 1961 —[Add. CIT v. Maharani Raj Laxmi Devi (1997) 91
Taxman 20 (SC)]
Where
however, division was not effected of the property the claim was rejected—[Kaluram
& Co. v. CIT (2002) 254 ITR 307 (2001) 115 Taxman 499 (Del)]
As per Kalwa Devadattam v. UOI, even
where there is complete partition by metes and bounds the family will be deemed
to continue (i) if no claim of partition is made by the members at the time of
the assessment; or (ii) if a claim is made but no finding is given by the
officer recording the partition.—[Kalwa Devadattam v. UOI (1963) 49 ITR 165
(SC)]
Section 6: The Hindu Succession
(Amendment Act), 2005 which came into effect on 09.09.2015 and by which
daughters in a joint Hindu family, governed by Mitakshara law, were granted
statutory right in the coparcenary property (being property not partitioned or
alienated) of their fathers applies only if both the father and the daughter
are alive on the date of commencement of the Amendment Act.
(i) An amendment of a substantive
provision is always prospective unless either expressly or by necessary
intendment it is retrospective. In the present case, there is neither any
express provision for giving retrospective effect to the amended provision nor
necessary intendment to that effect. Requirement of partition being registered
can have no application to statutory notional partition on opening of
succession as per unamended provision, having regard to nature of such
partition which is by operation of law. The intent and effect of the Amendment
will be considered a little later. On this finding, the view of the High Court cannot
be sustained.
(ii) Contention of the respondents
that the Amendment should be read as retrospective being a piece of social
legislation cannot be accepted. Even a social legislation cannot be given
retrospective effect unless so provided for or so intended by the legislature.
In the present case, the legislature has expressly made the Amendment
applicable on and from its commencement and only if death of the coparcener in
question is after the Amendment. Thus, no other interpretation is possible in view
of express language of the statute. The proviso keeping dispositions or
alienations or partitions prior to 20th December, 2004 unaffected can also not
lead to the inference that the daughter could be a coparcener prior to the
commencement of the Act. The proviso only means that the transactions not
covered thereby will not affect the extent of coparcenary property which may be
available when the main provision is applicable. Similarly, Explanation has
to be read harmoniously with the substantive provision of Section 6(5) by being
limited to a transaction of partition effected after 20th December, 2004.
Notional partition, by its very nature, is not covered either under proviso or
under sub-section (5) or under the Explanation.
(iii) Interpretation of a provision
depends on the text and the context (RBI v. Peerless (1987) 1 SCC 424, para
33). Normal rule is to read the words of a statute in ordinary sense. In
case of ambiguity, rational meaning has to be given (Kehar Singh v. State
(1988) 3 SCC 609). In case of apparent conflict, harmonious meaning to
advance the object and intention of legislature has to be given (District
Mining Officer vs. Tata Iron and Steel Co. (2001) 7 SCC 358).
(iv) There have been number of
occasions when a proviso or an explanation came up for interpretation.
Depending on the text, context and the purpose, different rules of
interpretation have been applied (S. Sundaram Pillai v. R. Pattabiraman
(1985) 1 SCC 591).
(v) Normal rule is that a proviso
excepts something out of the enactment which would otherwise be within the
purview of the enactment but if the text, context or purpose so requires a
different rule may apply. Similarly, an explanation is to explain the meaning
of words of the section but if the language or purpose so requires, the
explanation can be so interpreted. Rules of interpretation of statutes are
useful servants but difficult masters (Keshavji Ravji & Co. vs. CIT
(1990) 2 SCC 231). Object of interpretation is to discover the intention of
legislature.
(vi) In this background, we find
that the proviso to Section 6(1) and sub-section (5) of Section 6 clearly
intend to exclude the transactions referred to therein which may have taken
place prior to 20th December, 2004 on which date the Bill was introduced. Explanation
cannot permit reopening of partitions which were valid when effected.
Object of giving finality to transactions prior to 20th December, 2004 is not
to make the main provision retrospective in any manner. The object is that by
fake transactions available property at the introduction of the Bill is not
taken away and remains available as and when right conferred by the statute
becomes available and is to be enforced. Main provision of the Amendment in
Section 6(1) and (3) is not in any manner intended to be affected but
strengthened in this way. Settled principles governing such transactions relied
upon by the appellants are not intended to be done away with for period prior
to 20th December, 2004. In no case statutory notional partition even after 20th
December, 2004 could be covered by the Explanation or the proviso in
question.
(vii) Accordingly, we hold that the
rights under the amendment are applicable to living daughters of living
coparceners as on 9th September, 2005 irrespective of when such daughters are
born. Disposition or alienation including partitions which may have taken place
before 20th December, 2004 as per law applicable prior to the said date will
remain unaffected. Any transaction of partition effected thereafter will be
governed by the Explanation. —[Prakash v. Phulvati - Civil Appeal No.
7217 of 2013, dated 24.11.2015 (SC)]
Applicability of Capital gain taxation
In a judgement by Karnataka
High Court in the case of CIT v. R.
Nagaraja Rao, wherein it was held that the word ‘transfer’ does not include
partition or family settlement as defined under the Act. It is well-settled
that a partition is not a transfer, What is recorded in a family settlement is
nothing but a partition. Every member has an anterior title to the property
which is the subject-matter of a transaction, that is, partition or a family
arrangement. So there is a adjustment of shares, crystallization of the
respective rights in the family properties and therefore it cannot be construed
as a transfer in the eye of law. When there is no transfer there is no capital
gain and consequently no tax on capital gain is liability to be paid.
In course of appellate
proceedings, Tribunal recorded a finding that there was no transfer of assets
and amount received by assessee was a part of family arrangement which did not
give rise to liability of capital gain tax, said finding being a finding of
fact, no substantial question of law arose therefrom
The
questions of law raised by the Revenue in this appeal reads thus:
(i) Whether the consideration received under the
family settlement on transfer of right, title and interest in the family
property is a transfer under Section 2(47) of the I.T. Act and liable to be
taxed as Capital Gain under Section 45 of Income Tax Act?
(ii) Whether on the facts and circumstances of the
case and on true and proper interpretation of the family settlement dated 15th
October, 2003 the consideration of Rs. 2,25,00,000/- received by the assessee
on transfer of his right, title and interest in the family property to the
party of the second part under family settlement is a Capital Gain liable to be
taxed under section 45 of Income Tax Act?"
The
ITAT in para 19 of its order has recorded thus:
“19.
We find that in the instant case there has been a genuine dispute among the
family members and several suits were filed and judgements were pronounced.
Finally the parties to the suits decided to come to a settlement and the family
arrangement was reached and a Consent Decree was passed by the Bombay High
Court in Suit No. 4616 of 1998 on 16th October, 2003. The Royalty paid by the
Court Receiver was only an interim relief of their share of income from the
properties of G.D. Ambulkar, which right arose on account of their preexisting
right in the properties as per Will of G.D. Ambulkar. Family arrangement
is a device by which dispute between family members as to their respective
property rights were settled. Such settlement may involve division of the
property as between them and consequently a release of rights by one or the
other in favour of the allottees. Conflicting legal claims get so settled.
Since the settlement only defines a pre-existing joint interest as separate
interests, there is no conveyance, if the arrangement is bonafide. Since there
is no conveyance, there is no need for registration of such arrangements, when
orally made, even if later reduced to writing.”
The
ITAT following the decision of the Apex Court in the case of Maturi
Pullaiah v. Maturi Narasinham AIR 1966 SC 1836, held
that there is no transfer of assets in the family arrangement and the amount
received by the assessee is part of the family arrangement and not towards the
transfer of any capital assets and hence no Capital Gains Tax liability arises.
In our opinion, the decision of the ITAT is based on finding of facts, hence no
question of law arises. Accordingly, the appeal is dismissed. – [CIT v. Sachin
P. Ambulkar (2014) 221 Taxman 67 : 42 taxmann.com 22 (Bom.)]
Family members of assessee were holding shares in different business concerns and assessee under a family arrangement had transferred his share held in a firm in favour of a family member, there was no transfer in instant case
Family members of assessee were
holding apart from personal properties, family properties and shares in
different business concerns. Disputes arose between assessee and other family
members. Thereupon a family arrangement was made between assessee and other
family members, whereby assessee had resigned from a partnership firm and
transferred his share of profit and loss in said firm to a family member for a
consideration of Rs. 35,000 being capital balance of firm. Assessee claimed
that in instant case there was no transfer, which gave rise to any capital
gain. Assessing Officer held that there was a transfer in instant case and
consequently there was a capital gain in hands of assessee. Since (i) it is
well-settled that a partition is not a transfer, and (ii) what is recorded in a
family arrangement is nothing but a partition, there was no transfer in instant
case. Therefore, there was no liability of assessee to pay capital gain tax’
[In favour of assessee] (Related Assessment year : 1993-94) – [CIT v. R.
Nagaraja Rao (2013)
352 ITR 565 : (2012) 207 Taxman 236 : 21 taxmann.com 101 (Karn.)]
Applicability of Stamp Duty
There is no any specific
exemption in the Stamp Duty Acts for levy or exemption upon family settlement.
Stamp duty is levied on instrument. So, upon any agreement there may be levy of
stamp duty and therefore amount involved in the agreement is very important.
Therefore, the stamp duty of the agreement for transfer of immovable property
shall be applicable as per law.
Family business can be partitioned by making necessary
entries of division of capital of the family
The family business can be
partitioned by making necessary entries of division of capital of the family.
Such division must, of course, be effective so as to bind the members. For an
asset like family business or share in partnership, there cannot be said to be
any other mode of partition open to the parties if they wish to retain the
property and yet hold it not jointly but in severalty and the law does not
contemplate that a person should do the impossible.—[Chandas Haridas and
another v. CIT (1960) 39 ITR 202 (SC)]
It is also open to parties to allot
whole house to one member on his undertaking to pay money value of the shares
due to other members and the amount paid to other coparcenes will be available
to the members in addition to his cost of his share if the house is later
sold.—[Lalitaben Hariprasad v. CIT (2009) 180 Taxman 213 : 224 CTR 306, 320
ITR 698(Guj).
Validity of partition between widow-mother and sole
surviving coparcener-son
A
wife or mother has no right to claim partition, but if a partition is effected
a mother or the wife gets a share equal to that of the son.
The property which devolves on a
Hindu under section 8 of the Hindu Succession Act would be individual property.
Thus individual property shall continue to be individual property on
inheritance and HUF property on partition shall be that of the joint Hindu
family subject to the existence of family during the relevant assessment year
(Refer CWT v. Chander Sen (1986) 161 ITR 370(SC); CIT v. P.L Karuppan
Chettiar (1992) 197 ITR 646(SC).
Ownership of Property received by a member on a total
partition of HUF
The property received by male
member on total partition will retain its character as a joint family property.
If he is single, it will be HUF property on the marriage.—[CIT v. Arun Kumar
Jhunjhunwala and Sons (1997) 223 ITR 45 (Gau)]
Partition on death of coparcener
A partition is an act effected inter
vivos between the parties agreeing to the partition. A death of partner
cannot bring about an automatic partition and on such a death, the other
surviving members continue to remain joint. However, under the provisions of
Hindu Succession Act, 1956, there is a deemed partition for a limited purpose
of determining the share of the deceased coparcener for the purpose of
succession under the Act.
Procedures for recognition of partition
The
procedure by which the partition gets its recognition are as follows:—
(a)
The HUF, which has been hitherto assessed, must make a claim to the assessing
officer that the Hindu undivided family (HUF) properties have been subjected to
total partition.
(b)
Then, the Assessing Officer will make an inquiry into the claim after giving
notice to all members of the HUF; and
(c)
if he is satisfied that the claim is correct, then, he will record a finding that
there was a total partition of the HUF, and he will also mention the date on
which it has taken place.
No necessity of other coparceners to agree in order to
entitle a coparcener to claim for a partition
It
is not necessary that other coparceners should agree to the partition sought by
one of the coparceners.
But
merely because one member severs his relations with others there is no
severance between others.—[CIT v. Govindlal Mathurbhai Oza (1982) 138 ITR
711 (Guj)]
There can be an oral partition
It is not necessary to effect
partition by a written partition deed. It can be effected orally and be acted
upon. Even a partition of an immovable property can be by an oral agreement.—[Popatlal
Devram v. CIT (1970) 77 ITR 1073 (Orissa); Padam Lochan v. State of Orissa
(1972) 84 ITR 88 (Orissa)]
What shall be the nature of the property received on
partition?
The nature of the joint family
property on partition shall be as that of joint family property as and when the
recipient person is married. Hence the character of the property shall remain
that of the joint family property. Such property shall be assessed as
individual property, as long as the recipient is unmarried or is reduced to a
single person.
There can be an unequal
partition
It
is at the sweet will of the co-parceners and members as to whether to allot on
partition in accordance with the share specified under the Hindu Succession Act
or to allot lower or more to anyone or more persons. The partition in the
family could not be considered to be a disposition conveyance, assignment,
settlement, delivery, payment or other alienation of property. A member of a
Hindu undivided family has no definite share in the family property before
division and he cannot be said to diminish directly or indirectly the value of
his property or to increase the value of the property of any other coparcener
by agreeing to take a share lesser than what he would have got if he would have
gone to a court to enforce his claim. - [CGT v. N. S. Getti Chettiar (1971)
82 ITR 599 (SC)]
A complete partition with unequal shares as may be agreed between the parties is not illegal and can be final. However, an unequal partition between karta as the sole adult member and the minor children may be challenged at the instance of the minor children on attaining majority or having a partition reopened by the Court. Such a reopening however, will only be permitted if the division is unjust and unfair.
NOTE
In the light of
the said law, it can be a sound tool of tax planning by giving larger share to
the less financially sound coparcener and lesser share to the affluent.
Partition is not a transfer
Distribution of the assets of an
HUF in the course of partition, would not attract any capital gains tax
liability as it does not involve a transfer. There would be no clubbing of
incomes under section 64 as it would not involve any direct or indirect
transfer.
Partition does not give a
coparcener a title or create a title in him, it only enables him to obtain what
is his own in a definite and specific form for purposes of disposition
independent of the wishes of his formal co-shares .—[Girija Bhai v. Sadha
Shiv Dund Raj AIR 1916 (PC) 104]
In view of the unit of ownership
and community of interest of all coparceners in a joint Hindu family business
the position on partition of the joint Hindu family business, whether it be
partial or complete, is very similar in law to the position on dissolution of a
partnership firm. On partition the shares of the coparceners in the joint
family business become defined and their community of interests is separated.
Division of assets is a matter of mutual adjustment of accounts as in the case
of a dissolved partnership firm. The property which so comes to the share of
the coparcener, therefore, cannot be considered as transfer by the joint family
to a coparcener or the extinguishment of the right of the joint family in that
property, the joint family not having its own separate interest in that
property which can be transferred.—[CIT v. S. Balasubramanian (1988) 230 ITR
934 (SC)]
An order under section 171 is not required when an HUF
has not been hitherto assessed
Section 171(1) of the Act starts
with the expression “a Hindu Family hitherto assessed as undivided”. Hence, if
an HUF has not been assessed to tax, section 171 shall be inapplicable. Section
171 of the Income Tax Act, 1961, has no application to a case of a Hindu
undivided family which has never been assessed before as a joint family i.e. as
a unit of assessment. In other words, this section has application to a Hindu
undivided family which has been assessed before as a joint family and if the
Hindu undivided family has never been assessed to tax, this section has no
application.
It was held that the term “hitherto assessed as undivided” will mean as assessment made by the ITO meaning “actually assessed”. The Supreme Court further held that it will not include a case in which return has been filed and the proceedings for the assessment are pending.—[Roshan Di Hatti v. CIT (1968) 68 ITR 177 (SC)]
Responsibility to pay Tax After partition of an HUF up
to the date of partition
As per section 171(6), every member
of the HUF before partition shall be jointly and severally liable for the tax
on the income assessed of the HUF. The same section empowers the assessing
officer to recover the tax due on completion of the assessment on the disrupted
HUF from every person who was member of the HUF before partition. Further, as
per section 171(7), the several liability of the member shall be computed
according to the portion of the joint family allotted to him at the time of the
partition.
It may however be noted that joint
liability of the member is personal and distinct from the personal and several
liability as found by the Supreme Court in the case of Govinddas v. ITO
(1976) 103 ITR 123 (SC). As such a member of an HUF before partition is not
personally liable, after partition in respect the liability of HUF, ex-members
liability is personal.
Also, unlike the several liability,
the joint liability is not limited to the asset received by the member on
partition as noticed by the Supreme Court in the case of Addl. ITO v. A.S.
Thinmaya (1965) 55 ITR 666 (SC).
Validity of Penalty on HUF after a total partition
The provisions of section 171(8)
give the mandate to an assessing officer to levy penalty on an HUF disrupted
after partition. The levy of such penalty has also been upheld by the Allahabad
High Court in the case of CIT v. Raghuram Prasad (1983) 143 ITR 212 (All).
Assessee legal heir of late A, inherited land and received a part of it as per oral partition, since during lifetime of late A, family was never assessed as a HUF, section 171 would not apply even when there was a division/partition of property as such partition would not answer to definition of ‘partition’ in Explanation to section 171
Assessee
was one of surviving legal heirs of late A who inherited agricultural land.
Said land was divided as per oral partition among legal heirs and sale proceeds
from sale of parcel of said land was received by assessee in proportion with
his respective share in land. Assessee claimed deduction under section 54F
which was allowed by Assessing Officer. Commissioner disallowed said exemption
in hands of assessee on ground that aforesaid division of income and property
was without physical division of property and would not amount to partition
under section 171 and therefore, capital gains should have been assessed in
hands of estate of HUF. Since during lifetime of late A, family was never
assessed as a HUF, section 171 would not apply even when there was a division
or partition of property as such partition would not answer to definition of
'partition' in Explanation to section 171. [In favour of assessee] (Related
Assessment year : 2008-09) – [A.P. Oree v. ITO (2021) 436 ITR 3 : 282 Taxman
57 : 127 taxmann.com 740 (Mad.)]
Land held as stock,
transferred upon HUF-partition, does not tantamount to “conversion into ‘capital
asset” under section 45(2)
C.
Ramaiah Reddy (assessee-Individual) was engaged in real estate business. The
assessee filed return of income on 20.11.2006 declaring total income of
Rs.1,37,71,300/-The case was selected for scrutiny and a notice under section 143
(2) of the Act was issued. The assessee
in the profit and loss account had shown purchase and sale of sites and net
profit of Rs. 1,13,18,182 was shown and was declared as income from business. The land received by the assessee under the
family arrangement were treated as stock in trade in his books and were sold in
previous year. A query was made to the
assessee by the Assessing Officer that capital
gains on sale of such properties is attracted under section 45 (2) of
the Act and since, no capital gains were offered to tax therefore, the assessee
was asked to clarify why such capital gains were not computed. The assessee was
further asked to furnish original cost of acquisition of land along with
purchase deeds.
Assessing Officer by an order dated 31.12.2008 inter alia held that once family
partition takes place, the asset which comes
in the share of the assessee
partake the character of the assets in
the hands of assessee as capital
gains and therefore, conversion of
capital assets into stock in trade
and capital gains attract the
provision of Section 45 (2) of the Act. Assessing Officer determined the total
income of Rs. 8,61,37,451/- after making an addition of Rs. 6, 78,41,691/- on
account of long-term capital gains under section 45 (2) of the Act on sale of
lands and other assets. Assessee filed an appeal before CIT(A) who dismissed
the appeal of the assessee.
Assessee
filed an appeal before ITAT where, ITAT held that there was no conversion of
capital assets to stock in trade either by the assessee or the joint family and
therefore, the provisions of Section 45 (2) of the Act were not attracted to
the fact situation of the case. Hence, ITAT set aside the order passed by the Assessing
Officer and allowed the appeal of the assessee.
Aggrieved
Revenue filled an appeal before Bengaluru High Court. Karnataka High Court
holds land received by assessee-individual upon partition of HUF (both assessee
and HUF engaged in real estate business) as stock-in-trade and not capital
asset and hence, provisions of 45(2) (capital gains on conversion of capital asset
into stock-in-trade) not applicable; Rejects Assessing Officer’s view that once
family partition takes
place, the asset which comes in the
share of the assessee
partake the character of the
capital assets and
therefore, its sale during subject Assessment
year tantamounts to conversion of
capital assets into stock in trade
attracting capital gains taxation under section 45(2); Assessee received certain lands under a
partition of HUF (held as stock-in-trade) and treated the same as
stock-in-trade, ITAT denied applicability of Section 45(2) noting that there
was no conversion of capital assets into stock-in-trade either by assessee or
by the HUF; High Court observes on perusal of memorandum of partition that
assets which were taken over by assessee were forming
part of stock in trade of
real estate business and
continued to be in
nature of stock
in trade in the hands
of the assessee; States that the
character of assets received on
partition did not change, further,
clarifies that there is no provision in the
Act to indicate that assets
received on partition are
capital assets, as no deeming provisions have been enacted by
the Legislature”. – [CIT(C) v. C. Ramaiah Reddy [TS-333-HC-2020(KAR)] – Date
of Judgement : 25.06.2020 (Karn.)]
SLP dismissed against ruling that where assessee-company waived off its right to receive sale consideration of a property jointly held by its director with other family members in order to avoid deadlock in management of company on account of any disputes arising between family members who were also its shareholders, in view of fact that an order to that effect was passed under section 171 and, moreover, amount was duly written off in books of account, assessee’s claim for deduction of said amount as bad debts was to be allowed
Assessee
was a private limited company consisting of two directors. Even though there
was a partition effected between brothers of one of directors, other brothers
were demanding a share in properties. One of such properties, standing in name
of director was purchased by assessee-company. Entire property was divided into
three blocks. First two blocks were reserved for sale to outsiders, whereas
third block was sold to members of Hindu Undivided Family (HUF) of director. Subsequently,
a family settlement arrangement was arrived between members of HUF and company
and it was decided therein that assessee would waive right to recover dues of
sale consideration. According to assessee, said decision was taken in order to
avoid future deadlock in management of company on account of any disputes
arising between family members who were also its shareholders. An order was
also passed under section 171. Assessee filed its return claiming sale
consideration waived off as bad debt. Assessing Officer opined that mere
possibility that there could be future disputes/quarrels/differences between
members of HUF, could not constitute a ground to hold that amount in question
was bad debts. He, thus, rejected assessee’s claim. Tribunal, however, allowed
claim raised by assessee. High Court by impugned order held that, on facts,
revenue could not contest assessee's claim even after passing of order under
section 171 and, further, even otherwise, since only requirement of law was
that amount should have been written off in books of account of assessee which
was admittedly done, Tribunal was justified in allowing assessee’s claim. Special
Leave Petition filed against impugned order was to be dismissed. [In favour of
assessee] (Related Assessment years : 2003-04 and 2004-05) – [CIT v.
Millennia Developers (P) Ltd. (2019) 266 Taxman 186 : 109 taxmann.com 94 (SC)]
Finding
of Tribunal in search case of assessee-Karta of his HUF in respect of change of
his status from Karta to individual on partition of his HUF, could not be a
finding necessary for change of status in case of coparceners from individual
to Karta of their respective HUFs
The
business of money lending was being carried out by the assessee as Karta of
HUF. A search operation was carried out under section 132 against the
assessee-karta. Tribunal found that in partition of assessee’s HUF business
years back his wife and sons were given equal shares and HUF business came to
an end. According to Tribunal, after partition, status of assessee-Karta became
sole surviving coparcener in his HUF and, thus, converted into an individual
while on receipt of property, his sons who were married having wife and
children, acquired status of HUF. Since assessee wrongly continued to file
return in status of HUF and his sons in status of individuals, Tribunal
directed Assessing Officer to make their assessment in new status for past
years. It was found that direction of Tribunal would have effect of lifting bar
of limitation prescribed for reopening assessment/completing assessment -
Further, Apex Court has held that a finding necessary for disposal of a
particular case, i.e., in respect of a particular assessee and in relation to
particular assessment year is not a finding necessary for disposal of case pertaining
to others. Since direction given by Tribunal was clearly contrary to law, it
deserved to be quashed. [In favour of assessee] – [CIT v. Harnarayan Bhagat
(HUF) (2019) 111 taxmann.com 514 (MP)]
No co-coparcener (son) has a right to challenge the sale
made by the Karta of his family
Once the factum of existence of
legal necessity stood proved, then, in our view, no co-coparcener (son) has a
right to challenge the sale made by the Karta of his family. The plaintiff
being a son was one of the co-coparceners along with his father-Pritam Singh.
He had no right to challenge such sale in the light of findings of legal
necessity being recorded against him. It was more so when the plaintiff failed
to prove by any evidence that there was no legal necessity for sale of the suit
land or that the evidence adduced by the defendants to prove the factum of
existence of legal necessity was either insufficient or irrelevant or no
evidence at all. - [Kehar Singh (D) Thr. L.Rs. & Ors. v. Nachittar Kaur
& Ors. - Date of Judgement : 20.08.2018 (SC)]
Asset was disposed in favour of six minor daughters of Karta in form of fixed deposits, interest thereafter could not be treated as part of wealth of assessee-HUF and would not be taxable in hands of HUF
Family arrangement of assessee-HUF
provided for allotment of a sum to each of six minor daughters of Karta in form
of fixed deposits. Assessee claimed deduction of interest that accrued on fixed
deposits receipts. Assessing Officer held that document did not amount to
partial partition and though it was a family arrangement, it did not have
effect of taking away corresponding wealth from purview of HUF, and,
accordingly, he treated interest as income of HUF. Once HUF had settled a sum
in favour of six minor daughters of karta, corresponding amount ceased to be
wealth or assets of HUF. Amount could not be treated as part of wealth of HUF.
[In favour of assessee] (Related Assessment years : 1991-92 to 1996-97) – [P. Shankaraiah Yadav (HUF) v.
ITO (2015) 371 ITR 386 : 232 Taxamann 757
: 59 taxmann.com 263 (Andhra Pradesh and Telangana)]
Before section 171 can be invoked so as to assess property of Hindu undivided family even after partition, as a Hindu undivided family, it should have been assessed as a Hindu undivided family before such partition
The assessee was a Hindu undivided
family (HUF). According to it, a partial partition had taken place on 30.04.1978
whereby the assets of the HUF, both movable and immovable, had been divided
among the coparceners. Thereafter, the property in question was sold and
proceeds were invested in fixed deposits. On maturity of the fixed deposits on 08.09.1996,
the monetary shares were apportioned among the members of the HUF. For the
relevant assessment year, the Assessing Officer made assessment of the assessee
in the status of HUF by invoking section 171. On appeal, the assessee contended
that the original property in the hands of the HUF, after partial partition
thereof on 30.04.1978, could not be assessed to tax under section 171. In the
alternative, the assessee contended that since it never hitherto before (i.e.,
prior to the assessment year 1997-98) had been assessed as an HUF, there was no
question of it being assessed as an HUF. The Commissioner (Appeals) allowed the
assessee’s appeal holding that it could not be assessed as an HUF under section
171. On the revenue’s appeal, the Tribunal held that the property was liable to
be assessed in the hands of the assessee as an HUF under section 171(9). On
appeal to the High Court :
Held : At some point of time the
assessee was a HUF, but there was no dispute whatsoever that it had not been
assessed as a HUF prior to the assessment year 1997-98. Section 171 caters to a
situation where a HUF has been partitioned. It deals with assessment after the
division of the HUF. Thus, before section 171 can be invoked, so as to assess
the property of the HUF even after partition, as a HUF, it should have been
assessed as a HUF before such partition.
Sub-section (9) of section 171 is
an exception to sub-section (1) of section 171. For the applicability of
sub-section (9) of section 171, two pre-requisites are essential. Firstly, the
partial partition should have taken place after 31.12.1978 and secondly, such
partial partition must have taken place in a HUF which hitherto before was
assessed as a HUF. In the instant case, the assessee had not been assessed as a
HUF ever before the assessment year 1997-98. Therefore, the second essential
ingredient for the applicability of sub-section (9) of section 171 could not be
treated to have been fulfilled in the facts and circumstances of the instant
case. Therefore, sub-section (9) of section 171 would be clearly inapplicable
to the facts of the instant case. In view of the above, the order passed by the
Tribunal was to be set aside and the assessee’s appeal was to be allowed. [In
favour of assessee] (Related Assessment year : 1997-98) – [Tirlochan Singh
v. CIT (2010) 228 CTR 390 : (2009) 180 Taxman 640 (P&H)]
Order under section 171 not
required where an HUF has not been assessed to tax
The wordings of section 171 show
that the section has no application to an HUF, which has not been hitherto
assessed. – [CIT v. Hari Krishnan Gupta (2001) 117 Taxman 214 (Del.)]
Where properties (investments and monies deposited with bankers) which are capable of division are not actually divided, partial partition cannot be recognised
The assessee-HUF claimed that
partial partition in terms of section 171 had been effected in respect of
certain properties of the family comprising of cash in hand, shares and various
deposits, etc. It further claimed that though these properties were not divided
by metes and bounds but only visionally, it was permissible to do so under the
law in respect of partial partition of properties invested in business, in the
case of continuing business. The claim was rejected by the Tribunal but the
High Court allowed the assessee’s claim, holding that the said assets being
employed in business were not capable of division and, therefore, it was
possible for the family to have partial partition with regard to them without
physically dividing them. On appeal :
The members of a HUF may continue
doing the business and at the same time notionally divided the properties among
the various constituents of the family. As a proposition of law, the contention
may be correct but turning to the facts of the case, it was found that each of
the items of properties was capable of physical partition. This was not a case
where the HUF itself was carrying on its business before partial partition with
these assets. There was no reason why the parties could not divide these assets
by metes and bounds.
Although mere severance of the
status of the family may tantamount to partition under the Hindu law of Joint
family, the requirement of the Income-tax Act is a little more. A partition to
be recognised under the Act must lead to physical division of the joint
properties. The decision of the High Court was erroneous. If the properties
belonging to a HUF are not partitioned at all by dividing them among the
members, even though capable of division, then the members of the family cannot
say that so far as those properties are concerned they stand divided. In the
case of Kalloomal Tapeswari Prasad (HUF) v. CIT [1982] 133 ITR 690/ 8 Taxman 5
(SC), a partial partition was effected in respect of properties which were not
physically divided. The ITO declined to record the partition. It was held by
the court that mere severence in status was not sufficient to establish
partition. The requirement of the Hindu law and the requirement of the
Income-tax Act are different in this regard. The basic principle appearing from
the section itself is that in order to claim partition in respect of any
property, division of the property is a pre-requisite. The HUF cannot say that
it stands divided in respect of the property and at the same time enjoy the
property jointly. Whatever may be the position under the Hindu law, section 171
of the Income-tax Act is quite clear in this regard. In that view of the matter
these appeals were allowed. The judgment under appeal was to be set aside. – [CIT v. Venugopal Inani (1999)
107 Taxman 258 (SC)]
Groupwise division is
permissible
When partial
partition qua the persons is permissible under the law, the members
of the HUF can divide themselves groupwise and it is not necessary to define
the share of each member of each group. When a property is held by two groups
and if the share of each group is well defined, the requirement of partial
partition will stand fulfilled. From the memorandum of partition, it was
manifest that the share of each group of the two was well defined and thus the
legal requirement was fully satisfied. For the above reasons, the view taken by
the Commissioner in his order under section 263(1) did not commend to be
accepted. The Tribunal was correct in holding that a valid partition had been
made between the members of the HUF, who divided themselves in two groups
defining the share of each group in regard to the HUF's interest in the firm.
[In favour of the assessee] (Related Assessment year : 1972-73) – [CIT v. Shrawan
Kumar Swarup & Sons (1998) 232 ITR 123 : 147 CTR 305 (All.)]
Partition of HUF under Income Tax Act, 1961 and its
assessment after Partition - Finding is necessary even in deemed
partition - Even in cases of deemed
partition under section 6 of Hindu Succession Act, 1956 in absence of claim and
finding of partition in terms of section 171(1), no part of income of HUF
should be excluded from assessment
Maharaja P. P. Singh of
Balrampur was being assessed as an individual up to and including the
assessment year 1964-65. He had no issue of his own. On 28.12.1963, he adopted
Mahraja Dharmendra Pratap Singh, who was a minor, as his son. After the said
adoption, the status of Maharaja P.P. Singh was taken as that of HUF. Maharaja
P.P. Singh died on 20.06.1964. Thereafter his wife, Maharani Raj Laxmi
Devi, became the karta of the HUF consisting of herself and the aforesaid minor
son, Maharaja Dharmendra Pratap Singh. For the assessment year 1966-67, the
assessee filed a return declaring the total income of the HUF as Rs. 28,935.
Subsequently she filed another return showing the total income as Rs. 25,288.
The difference between the original and revised returns was explained on the
basis that the revised return had been filed by the HUF after excluding
one-sixth share belonging to the minor son, Maharaja Dharmendra Pratap Singh,
as an individual, because according to section 6 of the Hindu Succession Act,
1956, one-third share of Late Maharaja P.P. Singh in the HUF property devolved
on his two heirs Maharaja Dharmendra Pratap Singh (minor son) and Maharani
Raj Laxmi Devi (wife). The ITO held that the Act is a separate, distinct
and complete statute in itself and under the Act a change in the HUF status can
be effected only by claiming partition either partial or complete and that such
partition could become operative if a claim of partition has been preferred and
after examining the evidence produced, an order under section 171 of the Act
accepting the claim of partition has been accepted by the ITO, and that in the
case of the assessee both the elements were missing. He, therefore, held that
the assessee-HUF continued to be as it was before. The said view was followed
by the ITO in the assessments for the subsequent assessment years 1967-68 to
1970-71. The said view of the ITO was upheld in appeal by the AAC. On further
appeal, the Tribunal reversed the said view and held that the case of the
assessee was not of a partition contemplated in section 171 and, therefore, no
claim was necessary and absence of an order under section 171 does not mean
that the whole estate should be deemed to belong to the assessee-HUF. The
Tribunal, following the decision of the Allahabad High Court in the case
of Kalloomal Tapeswari Prasad (HUF) v. CIT, further held that
assuming the assessee’s case came under section 171 the estate of the assessee-HUF
having been diminished in terms of section 6 of the Hindu Succession Act, 1956
but with regard to which an order accepting the claim for partial partition has
not been made, the income from such property could not be included in the
computation of the income of the HUF. The Tribunal referred the question
above-mentioned to the High Court for its opinion and the said question was
answered by the High Court in favour of the assessee and against the revenue. On reference, the High Court upheld the view of
the Tribunal. On appeal to Supreme Court:
Though
for the purpose of HUF, section 6 of the Hindu Succession Act would govern the
rights of the parties but insofar as income-tax law is concerned, the matter
has to be governed by section 171(1). Therefore, in the instant case, one-sixth
income from the computation of income of the assessee-HUF could not be
excluded. - [In favour of revenue]
(Related Assessment
years : 1966-67 to 1970-71) - [Addl. CIT v.
Maharani Raj Laxmi Devi (1997) 224 ITR 582 : 139
CTR 487 : 91 Taxman 20 (SC)]
It is obligatory for Assessing Officer to make an enquiry after giving notice of inquiry to all members of HUF and record a finding as to whether there was or was not a total or partial partition of Joint family property and date of partition, if any – The assessing authority can reject the claim for partition only after holding an inquiry as envisaged by the law, and recording the finding about non-existence of the partition - A finding without such inquiry is no finding in eye of law
The assessee was being assessed as
HUF. During the relevant assessment years, the assessee claimed the benefit
under section 171. It was asserted that there was a partial partition in the
family by which a coparcener had separated from the family by taking a house
and another house was given to the wife of the karta of the aforesaid family.
This claim was based on the deeds of relinquishment without consideration. It
was held that these deeds did not constitute partial partition and manifested
mere severance of status. The Tribunal, therefore, rejected the assessee’s
claim under section 171. On reference :
Partition is not a transfer but
total severance of status brought about by physical division of property. In a
joint Hindu family property, each coparcener has an antecedent title. On
partition, this antecedent, i.e., joint title is transformed into separate
titles of individual coparceners. The nature of the transaction is not a
transfer, but creates a division of jointness into separation.
In terms of section 171, the
Assessing Officer was required to make an inquiry and record a finding as to
whether there had been a total or partial partition of the joint family
property, and if so, the date on which it had taken place. The provision of law
thus obligates the Assessing Officer to make an inquiry after giving notice of
inquiry to all members of the family. The expression used in this provision is
that the Assessing Officer shall make an inquiry. Indisputably, no such inquiry
was made in the instant case before recording the finding that there was no
partition. A finding without the inquiry is no finding in the eye of law. In
these circumstances, it could not be said that the ITO rightly rejected the
assessee's claim under section 171. It was, therefore, necessary that the
appropriate authority should hold an inquiry into the claim as set up in terms
of the aforesaid provision and then record the finding whether or not there was
partition and if so whether the properties were required to be included in the
assets of the HUF for the purposes of wealth-tax. [In favour of assessee]
(Related Assessment year : 1976-77) – [Ramchandra
Gopalji Sugandhi v. CIT (1996) 217 ITR 647 (MP)]
Hindu undivided family to continue to be assessed as such until enquiry and order recognizing partition - T was karta of HUF comprising himself, his wife B and his son S and daughter-in-law - On his death his widow acquired limited interest which was enlarged into absolute right under Hindu Succession Act - On death of B, her son S inherited her share in property - He adopted a son N in 1961 and gifted property inherited from his mother to adopted son in 1969 - Gift was recognised by gift-tax authorities - S claimed that after aforesaid gift in 1969 only 50 per cent income was assessable in HUF's hand and rest in N’s hands - In view of deeming fiction contained in section 171 unless an enquiry is undertaken and existence of partition is found as a fact and recorded so, in eye of law HUF continues to be assessable as if there has been no change in situation - Therefore, in instant case, there being no such enquiry and finding regarding partition, entire income from property inherited from his mother by S was assessable in hands of HUF of S
On a plain
reading of section 171(1) it becomes clear that a Hindu family which is
assessed as undivided has, for the purposes of the Act, to be deemed to
continue as such unless there is evidence of partition and a finding is
recorded to that effect under the Act in respect of such family. Before this
finding is recorded an inquiry has to be undertaken on the question whether
there has been a total or partial partition of the joint family property and if
there has been any such partition, the date on which it took place. The
expression ‘partial partition’ ‘as been defined in clause (b) of the
Explanation as a partition which is partial as regards the persons constituting
the HUF or the properties belonging to the HUF or both.
In the
instant case, admittedly, no inquiry was undertaken on the question whether
there had been a total or partial partition of the joint family property and,
if yes, the date on which it had taken place. That being so, in view of the
language of section 171(1), the HUF would be liable to be taxed as undivided
notwithstanding the effect of section 14(1) of the Hindu Succession Act.
Unless an
inquiry is undertaken by the department and a finding is recorded as required
by sub-section (3) of section 171 read with the definition of the expressions
‘partition’ and ‘partial partition’ in the Explanation to that provision, there
could for the purposes of the Income-tax Act be no partition and the HUF would
continue to be a HUF assessable to tax as if the property continues to belong
to the HUF; this is the position which emerges on a plain reading of section
171 and that too for the limited purposes of the Act only.
The
contention of assessee that since in the previous orders the ITO had held that
S had become the owner of his mother’s share in the property which share was
later transferred by gift inter vivos to his adopted son, the HUF could only be
taxed on 50 per cent of the interest and no more and the remaining 50 per cent
would have to be reckoned as the income of the adopted son, could not be
accepted. Thus, the entire income from property including income from property
gifted to adopted son was assessable in the hands of the HUF of S. (Related
Assessment years : 1972-73 to 1975-76) – [R.B. Tunki Sah Baidyanath Prasad
(1995) 212 ITR 632 : 126 CTR 262 : 80 Taxman 71 (SC)]
Order is binding on all parties - An order under section 171 is a judicial order to be passed after full detailed enquiry, and is to be binding between the parties till the same is set aside in accordance with law
As regards the petitioner’s
contention that an order under section 171 having been passed by the ITO
recognizing the partition, it was not permissible for him to ignore the same
subsequently and assess the family as undivided without setting aside that
order. It was contended by the revenue that this order was passed on
insufficient grounds and the correct facts were not disclosed. The only
important fact relied upon by the respondent was that in the account books of
the firm the capital continued to stand in the name of the petitioner and no partition
was effected in the books of that firm. As this fact had been brought to the
notice of the ITO concerned, this contention was not accepted to be true. The
order dated 27.11.1971 mentioned the manner of partition stating that this had
been effected by dividing the amount in the personal set of account books of
HUF, meaning thereby that the ITO knew that in the books of the firm the
capital remained as it was or he could have with reasonable efforts found out
the same. The order was passed in the assessment proceedings of the
petitioner-individual and the partition was recognised year after year till the
impugned notice was issued. Further, the provision in sub-sections (2), (3) and
(4) of section 171 indicate that an order under section 171 is a judicial order
to be passed after full and detailed enquiry and is to be binding between the
parties till the same is set aside in accordance with law. Admittedly, in the
instant case, the order dated 27.11.1971 had not been set aside and, therefore,
as long as that order was effective, the ITO could not take any steps to assess
the erstwhile HUF by ignoring the said order.
The contention of the revenue that
the sons of the petitioner were minors and, therefore, he could not effect a
partition was not tenable because the Supreme Court in its decision in Apoorva
Shantilal Shah v. CIT (1983) 141 ITR 558 (SC) had
upheld the authority of a father to effect even partial partition of some of
the family properties and consent of the sons was not held to be necessary. In
the instant case, however, the partition effected by the petitioner of the
property received on the partition of the bigger HUF was a complete partition
and not a partial partition and the same could not be challenged on the ground
of lack of authority of the karta. For the above reasons, the writ petition was
allowed and the impugned notice dated 30.03.1980 issued to the petitioner by
the respondent under section 148 for the assessment year 1971-72 was to be
quashed. [In favour of assessee]– [Gokul Chand v. ITO (1995) 211 ITR 738 : 175 CTR 146 : (1994) 77 Taxman
320 (All.)]
Respondent
formed assessee - HUF with his wife and sons - He inherited share in properties
of his deceased father which had been allotted to him on partition of HUF in
which respondent was also a member - Income from properties inherited by
respondent was not assessable as income of assessee - HUF
There was one ‘P’ who,
along with his wife, ‘A’, their son, ‘K’ and their daughter-in-law, constituted
a HUF. There was a partition in this family on 22.03.1954, under which ‘P’ was
allotted certain properties as and for his share and he got separated.
Thereafter ‘K’, son of ‘P’, and his wife and their subsequently born sons and
daughter constituted a HUF.
‘P’ died on 09.09.1963
leaving behind his widow and ‘K’, this son, who was also the karta of the
assessee-HUF as his legal heirs. These two persons succeeded to the properties
left by ‘P’ under section 8 of the Hindu Succession Act, 1956 and divided the
same between themselves.
In the assessment made
on the assessee - HUF, the ITO included in the computation of the total income,
the income received from the properties inherited by ‘K’ from his father. The
AAC affirmed the order of ITO. The Tribunal, however, held that properties
inherited by ‘K’ did not form part of joint family properties so that income
therefrom could not be assessed in the hands of assessee - HUF. The High Court
upheld the order passed by the Tribunal. On appeal to the Supreme Court:
Held : In view of
decision of this Court in CWT v. Chander Sen (1986) 161 ITR 370, it was
to be held that the income from the properties in question was not assessable
in the hands of the assessee - HUF. [In favour of the assessee] (Related
Assessment year : 1977-78) - [CIT v. P. L. Karuppan Chettiar
(1992) 197 ITR 646 (SC)]
Provisions of section 171 has no application to a case
of a Hindu Undivided Family which has never been assessed before as a joint
family, i.e., as a unit of assessment
A
HUF, consisting of two coparceners, one of whom was KA underwent partial
partition on 30.03.1970. Lands were allotted to KA, the Karta, his wife and two
minor sons, which, thus, became properties of the KA-HUF being the
assessee-HUF. Under Government Notification under section 4 of Land Acquisition
Act, dated 15.01.1970 abovesaid lands were acquired for Gujarat Housing Board.
After partial partition, the assessee-HUF entered into an agreement with the
said Board on 05.05.1970 for the transfer of the abovesaid lands at the rate of
Rs. 17.75 per Sq. Yd. On 14.09.1970, there was partial partition of the
properties of the assessee under which lands were divided amongst the members
of the assessee-HUF.
The
assessee-HUF, after said partial partition, did not file return of income for
the assessment year 1971-72 as, according to it, it had not earned taxable
income. However, the ITO held that it had earned income by way of capital gain
on acquisition of land. Therefore, it was liable to make return under section
139 and consequently issued notice under section 148, read with section 147(a).
The assessee-HUF filed a return showing income of Rs. 99 on 22.04.1974,
pointing that partial partition had taken place on 14.09.1970, and lands were
divided amongst the HUF's members and it was after partial partition that the
land was transferred to Gujarat Housing Board. The ITO, however, held that
since the partial partition was not by metes and bounds, it was an
afterthought. According to the ITO, the partition was contrary to section 171
and, hence the partial partition was not genuine. He determined the value of
land as on 01.01.1964 at Rs. 3 per Sq. Yd. and accordingly worked out the
capital gains. Relying upon his assessment order passed under section 143(2),
read with section 147(a), for the assessment year 1971-72, he held that since
the partial partition was not valid, the interest income earned on account of
compensation paid to the members of the assessee was taxable in the hands of
assessee-HUF in the assessment years 1972-73 to 1975-76.
KA
had invested his share of compensation in firm KTB and became a partner in this
firm. According to the ITO that amount which KA had invested in the firm, was
not his individual money, but money belonging to HUF and, therefore, share of
profits received from the said firm was also assessable in the hands of a HUF.
On appeal, the AAC held that as the assessee-HUF was not assessed to income-tax
any time prior to 1971-72, the provisions of section 171 were not applicable
and the entire proceeding was misconceived. He determined the value of land as
on 01.01.1984 and directed the ITO to work out capital gains on that basis. On
appeal by the revenue, the Tribunal held that since the assessee-HUF was not
previously assessed, section 171 had no application. The partial partition was
genuine and there was no material on record to show that partial partition was
a sham and the revenue had not challenged the partial partition on any ground
other than the legal ground, namely that it had to be invalid under section 171.
It held that it was not necessary for it to enter into the question of the
value of the land as on 1-1-1984. The Tribunal, relying on its earlier
decision, was of the view that the question of the value of land as on
01.01.1984 was required to be re-examined and, therefore, for statistical
purposes it allowed the cross-objections of the revenue. On reference:
Held
: Section 171 has no application to a case of Hindu family which has never had
been assessed before as joint family. In the instant case, since HUF-KA was
never assessed to income-tax in the past, section 171 had no application at all
to the facts of the instant case.
Genuineness
of the partial partition had not been challenged on any ground other than the
legal ground of section 171. Therefore, the partial partition was valid and,
thus, the capital gains was not assessable in the hands of HUF-KA. It followed
as a necessary corollary that income earned on the compensation amount received
by the members of the HUF would not be taxable in the hands of HUF-KA. Again KA
admittedly invested his share of the compensation amount in the firm KTB and
became a partner therein. The amount invested by KA did not belong to HUF and,
therefore, share income earned from the firm of KTB was not assessable in the hands
of HUF-KA (the assessee). Hence, the Tribunal’s decision was to be upheld.
(Related Assessment years : 1972-73 to 1975-76) - [CIT v. Kantilal Ambalal
(HUF) (1991) 192 ITR 376 : 98 CTR 105 : 59 Taxman 232 (Guj.)]
Section 171 does not
recognise a partition even if it was effected by a decree of court unless there
is a physical division of properties by metes and bounds
The definition of partition
given in Explanation to section 171 does not recognise a partition even if it
is effected by a decree of court unless there is a physical division of the
property and if the property is not capable of being physically divided then
there should be division of the property to the extent it is possible.
Otherwise the severance of status will not amount to partition. In considering
the factum of partition for the purposes of assessment it is not permissible to
ignore the special meaning assigned to partition under the Explanation, even if
the partition is effected through a decree of the Court. Ordinarily decree of a
civil court in a partition suit is good evidence in proof of partition but
under section 171 a legal fiction has been introduced according to which a
preliminary decree of partition is not enough, instead there should be actual
physical division of the property pursuant to final decree, by metes and
bounds. The Legislature has assigned special meaning to partition under the
aforesaid Explanation with a view to safeguard the interest of the revenue. Any
assessee claiming partition of a HUF must prove the disruption of the status of
a HUF in accordance with the provisions of section 171 having special regard to
the Explanation. The assessee must prove that a partition effected by agreement
or through court's decree, was followed by actual physical division of the
property. In the absence of such proof partition is not sufficient to disrupt
the status of a HUF for the purpose of assessment of tax.
Under the Hindu law members
of a joint family may agree to partition of the joint family property by
private settlement, agreement, arbitration or through court's decree. Members
of the family may also agree to share the income from the property according to
their respective share. In all such eventualities joint status of family may be
disrupted but such disruption of family status is not recognised by the
Legislature for purposes of income-tax. Section 171 and the Explanation to it,
prescribes a special meaning to partition which is different from the general
principles of Hindu law. It contains a deeming provision under which partition
of the property of a HUF is accepted only if there has been actual physical
division of the property. In the absence of any such proof, the HUF shall be
deemed to continue for the purpose of assessment of tax. Any agreement between
the members of the joint family effecting partition, or a decree of the Court
for partition cannot terminate the status of HUF unless it is shown that the
joint family property was physically divided in accordance with the agreement
or decree of the Court.
In the instant case, there
was no dispute that prior to the assessment year 1967-68 the assessment was
made against the HUF of which the respondent was a member. The assessee for the
first time raised the plea of partition and disruption of HUF in the
proceedings for the assessment years 1967-68 to 1969-70. There was no dispute
before the ITO that there had been no physical division of the properties by
metes and bounds. Therefore, the ITO was justified in holding that the status
of a HUF had not been disrupted and the income derived from the properties for
the purposes of assessment continued to be impressed with the HUF character.
The High Court committed an error in quashing the order of the ITO. In the
result, the order of the High Court was set aside. Decision of Kerala High
Court reversed. – [ITO v. Smt. N.K. Sarada Thampatty (1991) 187 ITR 696
(SC)]
Section 171 recognises that income which ceases to be HUF’s income cannot be assessed in HUF’s hands
The income which does not belong to the HUF cannot
be taxed in the assessment of the HUF if in fact the income has ceased to be
the income of the HUF and this has been verified by the ITO – [M.V.
Valliappan v. ITO (1988) 170 ITR 238 (Mad.)]
HUF must have earlier been assessed
to tax - If a HUF was not subjected to tax, the provisions of section 171(1)
will have no application
S carried on business of plying
buses. After his death, his second wife D claimed that the business was the
individual business of S and that under a will executed by S, she was entitled
to carry on the business in her own right. On a contrary claim set up by the
first wife of S and also his brothers, the Supreme Court held that the business
was that of the joint family of which S was the karta and that D had no
interest whatsoever in the business. However, in a civil suit filed in the
Court of the subordinate judge for partition of HUP, there was a preliminary
decree on 27.03.1950. For the assessment years 1962-63 to 1968-69 proceedings
were initiated for assessment of the income from plying of the buses in the
hands of the joint family and the assessments were completed accordingly. The
assessee urged before the Tribunal that the joint family became extinct on the
filing of a suit in 1947 or, in any event on 27.03.1950 when the subordinate
judge passed a preliminary decree for partition and, thus, no assessment could
be made against a joint family which was not in existence in the previous years
relevant for the assessment years 1962-63 to 1968-69. The Tribunal accepted the
above contention and quashed the assessments made on the joint family as not
maintainable. On reference, the revenue contended that though there was a
preliminary decree in March 1950, but for the purposes of tax law, the joint
family must be deemed to be in existence as no joint family properties were
partitioned in definite portions and no order was recorded under section 171(1).
Held : The expression ‘hitherto
assessed’ occurring in section 171(1) puts beyond any controversy that only a
HUF which has suffered tax assessment in the past can be deemed to continue to
be a HUF till an order of partition under section 171(1) is recorded. If a HUF
was not subjected to tax, the provisions of section 171(1) will have no
application. The fiction that a joint family shall be deemed to continue,
enunciated in section 171(1), is for the limited purpose of roping in cases of
joint families which had hitherto been assessed. It is not possible to extend
that fiction beyond the field legitimately intended by the statute. The fiction
in section 171(1) must necessarily be confined to the purpose for which it was
specified in that section, and for no other purpose. In the present case, a
suit for partition of the HUF had been filed in 1947 and a preliminary decree
had been passed in 1950. These steps had the necessary consequence of rendering
the joint family non-existent in law and that position prevailed for income-tax
purposes also as the matter was not saved by the provisions of section 171. In
the circumstances, assessment could not be made on the HUF in respect of the
income derived from the business in plying motor buses for the assessment years
1962-63 to 1968-69. [In favour of the assessee] – [Addl. CIT v. P. Durgamma
(1987) 166 ITR 776 (AP)]
Death
of a coparcener cannot bring about an automatic
partition and on such a death, the other surviving members continue to remain
joint
A partition is an
act effected inter vivos between the parties agreeing to the partition. A death
of a coparcener cannot bring about an automatic
partition and on such a death, the other surviving members continue to remain
joint. However, under the provisions of section 6 of the Hindu Succession
Act, there is a deemed partition for a limited purpose of determining the share
of the deceased coparcener for the purpose of succession under the Act. The
right of a female heir to the interest inherited by her in the family property
gets fixed on the death of a male member under section 6 of the Act but she
cannot be treated as having ceased to be a member of the family without her
volition as otherwise it will lead to strange results which could not have been
in the contemplation of Parliament when it enacted that provision and which
might also not be in the interest of such female heirs. The female heir shall
have the option to separate herself or to continue in the family as long as she
wishes as its member though she has acquired an indefeasible interest in a
specific share of the family property which would remain undiminished whatever
may be the subsequent changes in the composition of the membership of the
family. - [State of Maharashtra v. Narayan Rao Sham Rao Deshmukh (1987) 163
ITR 31(SC)]
Before levying penalty
on assessee-HUF for concealment of income, ITO passed order accepting its claim
for partition - In view of section 171(8), ITO could levy and collect penalty
up to date of partition from assessee-HUF as if no partition had taken place
and assessee-HUF was still in existence
On a combined reading of the
provisions of sub-sections (1) and (4) of section 171, it is clear-that in a
case where an order has been made recording the partition of joint family
property, the total income of the joint family has to be computed up to the date
of partition and the tax payable by the joint family has to be determined as
such, as if no partition had taken place and as if the joint family was still
in existence. Again, on going through the provisions of section 171(8), it
becomes clear that this sub-section expressly enacts that the provisions of the
section in relation to the levy and collection of any penalty, interest, fine
or other sum in respect of any period up to the date of total or partial
partition of a HUF apply as they apply in relation to the levy and collection
of tax. In other words, with regard to the levy and collection of penalty
relating to assessment up to the date of partition, one has to proceed on the
basis as if no partition had taken place and also that the joint family was
still in existence. Hence, the fact that in the instant case the order
recording partition was passed prior to the order levying penalty would be of
no consequence as the provisions of section 171(8) read with section 171(4)(a)
give express authority for the levy and collection of penalty in respect of
period up to the date of partition where the HUF had been disrupted.
It is well settled law that
reference to the provisions of the Act in support of the stand taken could not
be equated with the raising of a new question of law or of fact which had not
been canvassed earlier and may not be permitted to be raised for the first time
before the Tribunal.
In the instant case, it was apparent
that the stand taken by the department throughout was that it was competent for
the ITO to impose penalty in respect of the period up to the date of partition.
The mere fact that reference was not made to the provision of the Act which
empowered the ITO to levy penalty could not debar the revenue from referring to
the relevant provisions of the Act for the first time at the stage of the
application under section 256(1). In the application under section 256(1), the
department did not take any new stand but only brought to the notice of the
Tribunal the relevant provisions of the Act which justified its action.
Accordingly, the department was justified in law in raising the question of
applicability of section 171(8) in application filed under section 256(1). – [CIT
v. Raghuram Prasad (1983) 143 ITR 212 : 12 Taxman 50 (All.)]
On partition of bigger HUF, two pieces of land were
apportioned to smaller HUF, comprising of G and other five members, which
agreed to sell the same to P - By a partition deed, smaller HUF decided to
allot land to G (karta) on his agreeing to pay five-sixth share of its sale
proceeds to other five members who were paid eventually - There was a valid
partition in terms of section 171
The bigger-HUF, consisting of M, G
and V, was partitioned on 06.04.1950 when two pieces of land were apportioned
to a smaller HUF, consisting of G and his four sons and wife. By a registered
partition dated 12.09.1966, the members of smaller HUF decided to allot the
land to G who had agreed to pay five-sixth share of its sale proceeds to the
other five members. For the assessment years 1967-68 and 1968-69, the ITO
rejected G's application under section 171 for recording a finding of partial
partition on the grounds (i) that five-sixth share of the sale proceeds was, in
fact, not paid to the members as mentioned in the partition deed ; and (ii)that
there was no partition as required by the Explanation to section 171.
Accordingly, he assessed the capital gains arising out of the sale of land in
the hands of smaller HUF. The AAC sustained the ITO's order. On second appeal,
the Tribunal held (i) that there was a valid partition effected in respect of
the impugned land ; and (ii) that the sale proceeds were, in lact, apportioned
and paid to the respective members. On reference, the revenue contended, inter
alia, that the impugned transaction was, in effect and substance, a sale by the
smaller HUF to G.
Held : The term “sale” mean
transfer of property for a price. Partition is, on principle and authority, not
a transfer of the property but is merely a change in the mode of enjoyment. Partition
of joint Hindu family consists in ascertaining and defining the shares of its
coparceners in the joint property. Its actual division by metes and bounds is
not immediately necessary and such a division may take place subsequently.
Partition may be effected, inter alia, by agreement or conduct which evidences
an intention to sever the joint family status. The real test of an instrument
of partition is whether there was any property co-owned by the parties which is
divided by that deed in severality. The courts are only concerned with the
construction of its terms and not with legality of the claim set up by one or
the other.
In the instant case, the parties to
the instrument dated 12.09.1966 were co-owners of the impugned land which was
agreed to be divided in severality. Their shares were ascertainable. In
anticipation of the realisation of the sale proceeds, G executed promissory
notes of the respective amounts falling to the shares of other family members
who were subsequently paid accordingly. It could not be said that there was any
transfer of property in the sense of the transactions being sale. It was for
all intents and purposes a change in the mode of enjoyment. Therefore, there was
a valid partition and the ITO was bound to recognise and record it.
Accordingly, capital gains arising out of the sale transactions in question
were not taxable in the hands of the assessee. [In favour of the assessee]
– [CIT v. Govindlal
Mathurbhai Oza (1982) 138 ITR 711 : (1981) 22 CTR 165 : 6 Taxman 253
(Guj.)]
When HUF is reduced to a single
individual, section 171(1) will not apply
Section 171(1) will not apply where
a HUF has disappeared because of being reduced to a single individual – [Seethamma
v. CIT (1982) 136 ITR 238 (Mad.)]
Partition in the case of HUF can be effected orally
and entries in the books is the evidence of partition
In
CIT v. Shiolingappa Shankarappa Mendse and Bros. had occasion to deal with a
case where there was a partition of HUF and subsequent formation of a
partnership firm by the erstwhile members of the HUF. Transaction of partition
was evidenced by book entries. Partnership was held valid. The fact of
partition specifically stated in the partnership deed, but the partnership deed
refers to the document of partition and the relevant entries in the books of
the HUF were produced before the Commissioner. Having regard to the principles
of Hindu law, it is clear that the Tribunal was justified in taking the view that
the joint family of the three brothers had disrupted and they had formed a
partnership firm which was entitled to registration under the Act. [In favour
of assessee] - [CIT v. Shio Lingappa Shankarappa and Brothers (1982) 135 ITR
375 (Bom.)]
A transaction can be recorded as a
partition under section 171 only if, where the property admits of a physical
division and not the notional partition,
such division has actually taken place
A
transaction can be recognised as a partition under section 171 only if, where
the property admits of a physical division, a physical division of the property
has taken place. In such a case, mere physical division of the income without a
physical division of the property producing income cannot be treated as a
partition. Even where the property does not admit of a physical division, then
such division, as the property admits of should take place to satisfy the test
of a partition under section 171. Mere proof of severance of status under the
Hindu law is not sufficient to treat such a transaction as a partition. If a
transaction does not satisfy the above additional conditions, it cannot be
treated as a partition under the Act even though under the Hindu law there has
been a partition total or partial. The consequence will be that the undivided
family will be continued to be assessed as such by reason of section 171(1).
It
cannot be gainsaid that the fiction in section 171(1) does not operate in the
case of partial partitions as regards property where the composition of the family
has remained unchanged.
It
is common knowledge that in every partition under the Hindu law unless the
parties agree to enjoy the properties as tenants-in-common, the need for
division of the family properties by metes and bounds arises and in that process
physical division of several items of property which admit of such physical
division does take place. It is not necessary to divide each item into the
number of shares to be allotted at a partition. If a large number of items of
property are there, they are usually apportioned on an equitable basis having
regard to all relevant factors and if necessary by asking the parties to make
payments of money to equalise the shares. Such apportionment is also a kind of
physical division of the properties contemplated in the Explanation to section
171. Any other view will be one divorced from the realities of life. The
instant case was not a case where it was impossible to make such a division.
Nor was it shown that the members were not capable of making payment of any
amount for equalisation of shares. In fact, there was no material in the
instant case showing that the assessee ever seriously attempted to make a
physical division of the property as required by law. All that was attempted
was to rely upon the arbitrator's award which were insufficient to uphold the
claim of the assessee. Accordingly the impugned properties were capable of
physical division.
Section 171 applies to all
partitions total and partial, and that unless a finding is recorded under
section 171 that a partial partition has taken place, the income from the
properties should be included in the total income of the family by virtue of
sub-section (1) of section 171. In the instant case, no order under saction 171
had been passed and, accordingly, the income from said properties was
assessable in the assessee’s hands. - [Kalloomal Tapeshwari Prasad (HUF) v.
CIT (1982) 133 ITR 690 : 26 CTR 415: 8
Taxman 5 (SC)]
Business initially carried on as HUF business was partitioned
and was subsequently converted into partnership business – ‘T’, karta of HUF,
claimed that his share in partnership business should be assessed separately as
his individual income - Since partnership deed, signed by ‘T’ and others itself
contained recital that business was joint family business, there was no room
for applying principle that members of joint Hindu family had not acquired
business as members of joint family but in separate capacity as individual
partners under contract - Therefore, share of ‘T’ in partnership business could
not be regarded as his separate property
Section 171 of the Income-tax Act, 1961 [Corresponding to
section 25A of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922] - Hindu undivided family -
Assessment after partition - Assessment year 1960-61 - The business initially carried on as the HUF business was partitioned
and was subsequently converted into partnership business. Thereafter the said
partnership firm was dissolved and a new firm came into existence. ‘T’, karta
of the appellant-HUF, claimed in the relevant assessment year that his share in
the partnership business should be assessed separately as his individual
income. The Income-tax Officer rejected this claim. The AAC and also the
Tribunal and then the High Court affirmed the order of the ITO. On appeal to the Supreme Court :
Held : In the instant case, the finding of fact was that the
property was not acquired as partnership property under a contract, but the
partnership business was originally, prior to partition, Hindu undivided family
business. Hence, there was no room for applying the principle that members of a
joint Hindu family had not acquired the business as members of a joint family
but in a separate capacity as individual partners under a contract.
There was no difficulty in determining the character of any nucleus of dividend property. The business prior to the partition of the Hindu undivided family was assessed as joint family business for a number of years without any protest by ‘T’. The partition deed signed by ‘T’ and others itself contained a recital that the business was a joint family business. The finding of fact reached by the Tribunal that the business was, until partition, a joint family business could not be said to be unreasonable or perverse. If that be so, the share of ‘T’ in the partnership which came into being on the partition of the Hindu undivided family could not be regarded as his separate property. It became the property of the joint Hindu family of ‘T’ and his sons. This was the finding of fact, quite reasonably arrived at by the Tribunal, which the High Court had accepted. Consequently, the appeal was dismissed. – [Tolaram Bijoy Kumar v. CIT (1978) 112 ITR 750 (SC)]
Assessing Officer bound to take decision on application for partition and must mandatorily hold inquiry and record a finding - Assessing Officer cannot continue to make assessment on HUF without disposal of the application made for partition. If such assessment is done, it shall not be valid and it has to be set aside so that assessment can be made in conformity with the order under section 171 which the Assessing Officer is bound to pass in accordance with law
Section 25A of the Indian
Income-tax Act, 1922 (Corresponding to section 171 of the income-tax Act, 1961)
- Assessment order passed by ITO in case of a HUF without holding an inquiry
into validity of claim of partition made within a reasonable time by a member
of HUF - Such assessment liable to be cancelled. Tribunal dealing with such
question in appeal can not merely cancel ITO’s order without a further
direction to assessing authority either to modify assessment suitably or to
pass a fresh order of assessment in accordance with law
From a fair reading of
section 25A, it appears that the ITO is bound to hold an inquiry into the claim
of partition if it is made by or on behalf of any member of the HUF which is
being assessed hitherto as such and record a finding thereon. When a claim is
made in time and the assessment is made on the HUF without holding an inquiry as
contemplated by section 25A(1), the assessment is liable to be set aside in
appeal as it is in clear violation of the procedure prescribed for the purpose.
Admittedly, in the instant case the claim for partition was not only made but
was made well before the impugned assessments. The Tribunal was, therefore,
right in holding that the impugned assessments were liable to be set aside as
there was no compliance with section 25A(1).
It is well known that an
appellate authority has the jurisdiction as well as the duty to correct all
errors in the proceedings under appeal and to issue, if necessary, appropriate
directions to the authority against whose decision the appeal is preferred to
dispose of the whole or any part of the matter afresh unless forbidden from
doing so by the statute. The statute does not say that such a direction cannot
be issued by the appellate authority in a case of this nature. In interpreting
section 25A(1), one cannot also be oblivious to cases where there is a
possibility of claims of partition being made almost at the end of the period
within which assessments can be completed making it impossible for the ITO to
hold an inquiry as required by section 25A(1) by following the procedure
prescribed therefore.
In the instant case,
however, since it was not established that the claim was a belated one, the
proper order to be passed was to set aside the assessments and to direct the
ITO to make fresh assessments in accordance with the procedure prescribed by
law. We do not, however,
agree with the orders made by the High Court by which it upheld the assessments
and directed the ITO to make appropriate modifications. Such an order is
clearly unwarranted in the circumstances of this case. The order of the High
Court is, therefore, set aside. The question referred by the Tribunal to the
High Court does not appear to be comprehensive enough to decide the matter
satisfactorily. The question may have to be read as including a further
question regarding the nature of the orders to be passed by the Tribunal, if the
orders of assessments are held to be contrary to law. In the light of the
above, we hold that the orders of assessments are liable to be set aside but
the Tribunal should direct the ITO to make fresh assessments in accordance with
law. – [Kapurchand
Shrimal v. CIT (1981) 131 ITR 451 (SC)]
Partition must be by metes and bounds if female member is allotted a share
One ‘S’, his wife, ‘K’, and
their sons ‘G’ (major) and ‘B’ (minor) constituted a joint Hindu family owing,
inter alia, a business. By a release deed dated 10.11.1956, ‘G’ relinquished
his interest in family business. ‘S’ died on 01.09.1961. He had executed a will
on 22.02.1960 bequeathing his one-third interest in family including business,
to his wife and two sons equally. ‘G’ released his interest in business which
he got under will in favour of other two legatees by document dated 11.09.1961.
It was also recited there in that there was partial partition between ‘K’ and
her son ‘B’ of business and thereafter they became partners in said business.
Assessee-Hindu undivided family contended that there was a partial partition of
joint family business and, therefore, income from business should not be
assessed in hands of HUF. A Hindu female has no right under Hindu law to demand
a partition by metes and bounds. Therefore, it was not open to ‘K’ in her
capacity as guardian of her minor son ‘B’ to effect a partition between herself
and B’. Therefore, by release deed dated 11.09.1961, no valid partition between
mother and minor son was effected. Therefore, after 11.09.1961, Hindu undivided
family consisting of 'K' and 'B' continued to have two-thirds interest in joint
family business and by virtue of release effected by ‘G’ in their favour on
11.09.1961, each of them individually was entitled to one-sixth share in
remaining income of business. [In favour of revenue] (Related Assessment years
: 1963-64 and 1964-65) - [CIT v. Shantikumar Jagabhai (1976)
105 ITR 795 (Guj.)]
In course of assessment proceedings against a HUF, an application under section 25A of 1922 Act was made claming partition - ITO having recorded statements of various members of HUF including appellant rejected claim, under section 25A of 1922 Act - Thereupon, a suit for partition was filed and City Civil Court passed a decree for partition - On appeal before AAC, reliance was placed on said decree - AAC, however, dismissed appeal - A second appeal to Tribunal was also dismissed - Thereafter, assessments were made against HUF up to assessment year 1965-66 - A large sum of tax and penalty became due - Income-tax authorities, thus, took steps for realisation of dues against appellant's family and got attached various properties - Appellant filed writ petition challenging order of assessments as well as attachment orders - High Court dismissed writ petition in limine - Income-tax authorities had to take their own view and they were not bound by partition decree passed by City Civil Court - Therefore, when income-tax authorities rejected HUF’s claim for partition, appellant was bound by assessments made in respect of income of his family which continued to be joint in eye of law - Consequently, share of appellant’s properties received by him from HUF or income thereof was liable for income-tax dues in question
Section 171 of the Income-tax Act, 1961 (Corresponding to
Section 25A of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922) - The impugned orders did not
suffer from any infirmity of law or any such defect which made them void.
Notice of the enquiry had been given to all the members as admitted by the
appellant himself. He had been examined in the proceedings. Sub-section (3) of
section 25A of 1922 Act provides that where an order accepting partition had
not been passed in respect of a Hindu family assessed as undivided such family
shall be deemed for the purposes of the Act to continue to be a Hindu undivided
family. A partition preliminary decree came much later. The income-tax
authorities had their own view to take. They were not bound by the decree. No
reference was taken under the Income-tax Act challenging the order of the
Tribunal dismissing the appeal. It was further seen from records that notices
were being issued in the name of family which was carrying on business in the
assumed name of ‘B’. They were neither issued to nor served on ‘B’ - the dead
person. In response to the notices returns were being filed by the managing
member of the. family. At no stage before the income-tax authorities a
contention was raised that the notice was served on a dead person. In such
circumstances, the appellant was bound by the assessment made in respect of the
income of his family which continued in the eye of law to be joint. The share
of the appellant's properties received by him from the joint family or the
income thereof was liable for the income-tax dues in question. In the result,
instant appeal failed and was to be dismissed. [In favour of the revenue]
(Related Assessment year : 1955-56) – [Narendrakumar J. Modi v. CIT (1976) 105 ITR 109 (SC)]
Whether the provisions of the 1922, Act would apply or the provisions of the 1961 Act would apply
Section 171 of the 1961 Act
corresponds to section 25A of the 1922 Act and provides for assessment of a
Hindu undivided family after partition. But it has made various changes in the
law. The principal change is that the new section applies not only to cases of
total partition, but also to cases of partial partition.
Sub-section (6) of section 171 of
1961 Act applies only to situation where assessment of HUF is completed under
section 143 or section 144 of 1961 Act, and not to situation where assessment
of HUF is completed under corresponding provisions of 1922 Act - Therefore,
where assessments of HUF for assessment years in question were completed in
accordance with provisions 1922 Act which included section 25A, ITO was not
entitled to avail of provision enacted in sub-section (6), read with
sub-section (7), of section 171 of 1961 Act for purposes of recovering tax or
any part thereof personally from any members of joint family – (Related
Assessment years : 1950-51 to 1956-57) - [Govinddas v. ITO (1976) 103 ITR 123
(SC)]
Specific claim is necessary before ITO initiates inquiry - Mere knowledge on the part of the ITO is neither material nor relevant. It is evident that the ITO is called upon to make an inquiry and record an order only when and if a claim to that effect is made by or on behalf of any member of such family
Section 160 read with section 171 of
the Income-tax Act, 1961 (Corresponding to section 41(1) read with section
25A(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922) - The assessee was a HUF. One of the
members of the HUF instituted a suit for partition and a preliminary decree
came to be passed in 1931 partitioning the family property into five branches
and on passing of final decree in 1939 family properties and assets were
divided into five lots.
Mere knowledge on the part
of the ITO is neither material nor relevant. Section 25A(1) of the 1922 Act
provided that where at the time of making an assessment under section 23, it
was claimed by or on behalf of any member of a Hindu family hitherto assessed
as undivided that a partition had taken place among the members of such family,
the ITO should make such inquiry there into as he might think fit, and, if he
was satisfied that the joint family property had been partitioned among the
various members or groups of members in definite portions, he should record an
order to that effect. It is evident that the ITO is called upon to make an
enquiry and record an order only when and if a claim to that effect is made by
or on behalf of any member of such family. Where no such claim has been made
there was no question of an order being passed simply because the ITO had
knowledge of the pendency of the partition suit. In the absence of an order
under section 25A(1), the Hindu family is by force of sub-section (3) to be
statutorily deemed to continue to be a Hindu undivided family. [In favour of
assessee] (Related Assessment
years : 1941-42 to 1950-51) - [Pratap Chandra v. ITO (1975)
100 ITR 551 (All.)]
There can be an unequal
partition
It is at
the sweet will of the co-parceners and members as to whether to allot on
partition in accordance with the share specified under the Hindu Succession Act
or to allot lower or more to anyone or more persons. The partition in the
family could not be considered to be a disposition conveyance, assignment,
settlement, delivery, payment or other alienation of property. A member of a
Hindu undivided family has no definite share in the family property before
division and he cannot be said to diminish directly or indirectly the value of
his property or to increase the value of the property of any other coparcener
by agreeing to take a share lesser than what he would have got if he would have
gone to a court to enforce his claim. - [CGT v. N. S. Getti Chettiar (1971)
82 ITR 599 (SC)]
Law is well settled that a partition
of the joint family properties can be effected by an oral agreement,
irrespective of the value of the property - A memorandum recording factum of partition, evidencing
previous oral partition does not create any new jural relationship amongst
parties and, hence, it is not hit by section 17(1) of Indian Registration Act,
1908 – Therefore, such a memorandum of partition was admissible in law even
without registration under 1908 Act
The assessee-HUF effected an oral
partition on 01.04.1957, and the regular memorandum evidencing oral partition
was drawn up on 01.05.1957. The memorandum indicated that both movable and
immovable properties were divided. The share capital in two firms was also
partitioned. It filed an application under section 25A of the 1922 Act and an
order was sought to the effect that the joint family property had been
partitioned among the various members in definite portions as required under
section 25A, sub-section (1). The Income-tax Officer rejected this claim
holding that the memorandum was compulsorily registerable and that the
properties which initially belonged to the karta should have been transferred
by another registered document to the other members. The order of the Income-tax
Officer was confirmed in appeal by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner. On
second appeal, the Tribunal affirmed the order of the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner. On reference:
In the instant case, the disruption
of the joint family with partition by metes and bounds in respect of properties
covered by the memorandum dated 01.05.1957, took place on 01.04.1957. Since,
then, the joint ownership was converted into individual ownership and the
memorandum was merely evidence of that fact. The memorandum by itself did not
create any new jural relationship amongst the parties. It merely recorded the
factum of partition which had already taken place. It is not hit by section
17(1) of the Indian Registration Act. Therefore, the memorandum of partition
dated 01.05.1957, evidencing previous oral partition on 01.04.1957, was
admissible in law and did not require registration under the Indian
Registration Act. - [In favour of the assessee] (Related Assessment year :
1959-60) – [Popatlal Devram v. CIT (1970) 77 ITR 1013 (Orissa)]
Provision
applies to both schools of Hindu law
Section
171 applies to families governed by the Dayabhaga School of Hindu Law as well
as to the Mitakshara School of Hindu Law. The interpretation that the
expression ‘group of members’ is intended to refer to a group consisting of a
head of a branch and his sons who remain undivided, cannot be accepted since
such an interpretation will be meaningless in relation to a Hindu family
governed by the Dayabhaga School – [Joint Family of Udayan Chinubhai v. CIT
(1967) 63 ITR 416 (SC)]
Once order under section 25(1) of Income Tax Act, 1922 has been passed in respect of HUF, that family cannot be assessed in the status of a Hindu undivided family; unless the order is set aside by a competent authority
The question before the Hon’ble
Supreme Court of India in this case was whether a decision in a particular
assessment year operates as res judicata in respect of the matter decided in
any subsequent proceedings for a different Assessment Year. The court stated as
follows: “It is true that an assessment year under the Income-tax Act is a
self-contained assessment period and a decision in the assessment year does not
ordinarily operate as res judicata in respect of the matter decided in any
subsequent year, for the assessing officer is not a Court and he is not
precluded from arriving at a conclusion inconsistent with his conclusion in
another year. It is open to the Income-tax Officer, therefore, to depart from
his decision in subsequent years, since the assessment is final and conclusive
between the parties only in relation to the assessment for the particular year
for which it is made. A decision reached in one year would be a cogent factor
in the determination of a similar question in a following year, but ordinarily
there is no bar against the investigation by the Income-tax Officer of the same
facts on which a decision in respect of an earlier year was arrived at. But
this rule, in our judgment, does not apply in dealing with an order under S.
25-A (1).” Income from property of a Hindu undivided family, 'hitherto'
assessed as undivided, may be assessed separately if an order under section 25A
(1) had been passed. When such an order is made, the family ceases to be
assessed as a Hindu undivided family. Thereafter, that family cannot be
assessed in the status of a Hindu undivided family unless the order is set
aside by a competent authority. Under clause (3) of section 25A if no order has
been made notwithstanding the severance of the joint family status, the family
continues to be liable to be assessed in the status of a Hindu undivided
family, but once an order has been passed, the recognition of severance is
granted by the income-tax department, and clause (3) of section 25A will
have no application. – [Joint
Family of Udayan Chinubhai, etc. v. CIT, Gujatrat (1967) 63 ITR 416 : [TS-4-SC-1966]
(SC)]
Failure to make an order on the claim for partition made does not affect the jurisdiction of the ITO to make an assessment of the HUF which has hitherto been assessed as undivided
In the instant case no
orders were recorded by the ITO at the time of making assessments in respect of
the five years, and therefore, no personal liability of the members of the
family arose under the proviso to sub-section (2). The ITO did not seek to
reach in the hands ‘T’ and ‘V’ the property which was once the property of the
HUF he seeks to reach the personal income of the two respondents. That the ITO
could do only if by virtue of the proviso to sub-section (2) a personal liability
has arisen against them. In the absence of an order under sub-section (1),
however, such a liability did not arise against the members of the HUF even if
the family is disrupted. The remedy of the income-tax authorities, in the
circumstances of the case, was to proceed against the property, if any of the
HUF. That admittedly they have not done. The appeals were dismissed
accordingly. (Related Assessment years : 1941-42 to 1946-47) – [Addl.
ITO v. A. Thimmayya (1965) 55 ITR 666 (SC)]
Partition is not a transfer
Each
coparcener has an antecedent title to the joint Hindu family property. Though
its extent is not determined until partition takes place. That being so,
partition really means that whereas initially all the coparceners had subsisting
title to the totality of the property of the family jointly, that joint title
is transformed by partition into separate title of the individual coparceners
in respect of several items of properties allotted to them respectively. As
this is the true nature of a partition, the contention that partition of an
undivided Hindu family property necessarily means transfer of the property to
the individual coparceners cannot be accepted. - [Ajit Kumar Poplai and
Another AIR 1965 (SC) 432]
Partition will not be invalid if minor is not represented by natural guardian
So long as the adult
members make a division which is fair and which is not unequal or prejudicial
to the minor's interest, the division would be binding, and if the minor after
attaining majority thinks that it was unfair or prejudicial, it would be open
to him to attack the partition by appropriate proceedings. So long as the
interests of the minor have not suffered, it is open even to a person other
than the natural guardian to represent the minor in the partition. Thus, a
partition is not invalid on ground that minor was not represented by his
natural guardian. – [Jakka Devayya &
Sons v. CIT (1952) 22 ITR 264 (Mad.)]
Claim for partition can be made at any time before assessment
Section 171 of the
Income-tax Act, 1961 [Corresponding to section 25A of the Indian Income-tax
Act, 1922] – Section 25A of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 requires a physical
division of property before an ITO can pass an order that joint Hindu family property
has been partitioned among various members or group of members in definite
portions. The expression ‘at the time of making an assessment’ stated in section 25A of
the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 means in the course of the process of
assessment. Expression at time of making an assessment as stated in section 25A
is not restricted to time of making final order determining assessment and,
therefore, power of ITO to pass an order under section 25A(1) arises when at
time of making an assessment under section 23 of the Indian Income-tax Act,
1922 a claim is made by member that a partition has taken place but not
necessarily during accounting year. A partition after close of accounting year
may be put forward and is bound to be enquired into by ITO. Hence, even when a
claim for partition is made after the expiry of the accounting period but
before the assessment, it should be entertained by the ITO. (Related Assessment
year : 1943-44) – [Rajmal Paharchand v. CIT (1950) 18
ITR 1 (Punjab)]
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