Controller Of Estate Duty, Andhra Pradesh
v.
Kancharla Kesava Rao
(Supreme Court Of India)
Civil Appeal No. 107 Of 1970 | 04-04-1973
1. This is an appeal by certificate. It is directed against the decision of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in a reference under Section 64 (l) of the Estate Duty Act, 1953, (to be hereinafter referred to as the Act). The question of law referred to the High Court was:
"Whether the value of 25 acres of wet land is exempt from levy of estate duty under Section 24 of Estate Duty Act, 1953"
2. The material facts of the ease, as can be gathered from the case stated, are these:-
3. One Venkataramayya died in April, 1940 leaving behind him his widow and two sons, who constituted a Hindu undivided family. One of his Sons, namely, Chandrasekhera Rao died in the year 1941, leaving behind him six minor sons and a widow. Subsequently, a partition was effected between the members of the family on 16-6-1943 by a registered partition deed. Under that deed Kotamma, the widow of Venkataramayya, who had a right to inherit her husbands share in the non-agricultural properties as well as the right to be maintained from out of the family income, gave up her right both in the non-agricultural properties, except the right to reside in a portion of the family house as well as her right to be maintained out of the family income. At the same time the other members of the family allotted to her 25 acres of wet land, which she was to enjoy during her lifetime and the same was to devolve after her death on the other members of the former family as per the stipulations in the partition deed. She was not entitled to alienate the property allotted to her share.Kotamma died on April 9, 1958. The authorities under the Act proceeded to levy estate duty on the value of the property allotted to Kotamma under-the partition deed dated 16-6-1943 under Section 7 of the Act. The accountable persons contended that the estate in question is not liable to pay estate duty as it came within the scope of S. 24 of the Act. The departmental authorities, including the Tribunal, rejected that contention. Thereafter, at the instance of the Revenue, the question set out above was referred to the High Court. The High Court has answered that question in the affirmative and in favour of the assessee. The Revenue has come up in appeal to this Court. The only question for consideration is whether the facts of the present case fall within the scope of Section 24 of the Act
4. Section 7 (l) of the Act says:
"7. (l) Interests ceasing on death: Subject to the provisions of this section, property in which the deceased or any other person had an interest ceasing on the death of the deceased shall be deemed to pass on the deceaseds death to the extent to which a benefit accrues or arises by the cesser of such interest, including, in particular a coparcenary interest in the joint family property of a Hindu family governed by the Mitakshara, Marumakkattayam or Aliyasantana law."
The remaining portions of that section are not relevant for our present purposes.
5. There is no dispute that when Kotamma died her interest in the wet land ceased and that it passed on to the other members of the former joint family as provided in the partition deed. Hence prima facie the present case comes under Section 7 of the Act. Only question is whether the arrangement made under the partition deed can be considered as disposition within the meaning of that expression in Section 24 of the Act. Now let us turn to Section 24 (1). That section reads:
The remaining portion of this section is also not necessary for our present purposes."24 (l) Property reverting to disponer: Where by a disposition of any property an interest is conferred on any person other than the disponer for the life of such person or determinable on his death, the remainder being conferred upon the disponer absolutely, and such person enters into possession of the interest and thence forward retains possession of it, then, on the death of such person, the property shall not be deemed to pass by reason only of its reverter to the disponer in his lifetime."
6. It was urged on behalf of the Revenue by Mr. Sharma, its learned counsel, that Section 24 is wholly inapplicable to the facts of the present case. He contended that on the facts of this case there was no disposition. He further contended that under the terms of the partition deed me property did not revert wholly to the disponers. According to him it partly reverted to the disponers and partly to the widow of Chandrasekhara Rao, who cannot be considered as one of the disponers.
7. Mr. Rama Rao, the learned counsel for the assessee, on the other hand, contended that under the partition deed, there was a disposition in favour of Kotamma and on her death the property reverted back to all the disponers. As we are in agreement with the contention of Mr. Sharma on the first point, namely, that there was no disposition under the partition deed, we do not think it necessary to go into other contention.
8. We are unable to accept the contention of Mr. Rama Rao that under the partition deed there was disposition. According to him, the true nature of the transactions entered into under the partition deed were that Kotamma gave up all her rights in the family properties, including her right to maintenance unilaterally, but at the same time the other members of the family voluntarily gave her 25 acres of wet land to be enjoyed by her during her lifetime. For this contention of his he placed reliance on the terms of the partition deed. In a matter like this we are not merely to look the form in which the deed is drawn up. We are to find out the true nature of the transaction. From the facts set out above it is absolutely clear that under the partition deed Kotamma gave up her rights to the extent mentioned earlier and in lieu thereof the other members of the family allotted to her share 25 acres of wet land to be enjoyed by her during her lifetime. It was an adjustment of rights. The contention of Mr. Rama Rao that there was disposition under the partition deed-the contention which has appealed to the High Court -appears to us to be an erroneous one. A partition is not a transfer in a strict sense. It is an adjustment of the rights of the various members of the family. In Commissioner of Income-tax, Gujarat v. Keshavlal Lallubhai Patel, 55 1TR 637=(AIR 1966 SC 866 [LQ/SC/1965/315] ) this Court quoted with the approval a passage from the decision of the Madras High Court in Gutta Radhakrishnayya v. Gutta Sarasamma, ILR (1951) Mad 607 = (AIR 1951 Mad 213 [LQ/MadHC/1950/159] ). That passage reads thus:
"Partition is really a process in and by which a joint enjoyment is transformed into an enjoyment in severally. Each one of the sharers had an antecedent title and, therefore, no conveyance is involved in the process, as a conferment on a new title is not necessary."
9. This Court had to consider the meaning of the word disposition occurring in Section 2 (xxiv) of the Gift Tax Act. That section defined the expression transfer of property thus:
"2. (xxiv) "transfer of property" means any disposition, conveyance, assignment, settlement, delivery, payment or other alienation of property and, without limiting the generality of the foregoing, includes-
(a) the creation of a trust In property;
(b) the grant or creation of any lease, mortgage, charge, easement, licence, power, partnership or interest in property;
(c) the exercise of a power of appointment of property vested in any person, not the owner of the property, to determine its disposition in favour of any person other than the donee of the power; and
(d) Any transaction entered into by any Person with intent thereby to diminish directly or indirectly the value of his own property and to increase the value of the property of any other person."
The question for consideration in that case was, inter alia, whether a partition is a disposition. Dealing with this question this Court in Commissioner of Gift-Tax, Madras v. N. S. Getti Chettiar, 82 ITR 599 [LQ/SC/1971/484] at p. 605 =(AIR 1971 SC 2410 [LQ/SC/1971/484] ) observed:
"A reading of this section clearly goes to show that the words "disposition", "conveyance", "assignment" "settlement," "delivery and "payment" are used as some of the modes of transfer of property. The dictionary gives various meanings for those words but those meanings do not help us. We have to understand the meaning of those words in the context in which they are used. Words in a section of a statute are not to be interpreted by having those words in one hand and the dictionary in the other. In spe lling out the meaning of the words in a section, one must take into consideration the setting in which those terms are used and the purpose that they are intended to serve. If so understood, it is clear that the word "disposition" in the context means giving away or giving up by a person of something which was his own, "conveyance" means transfer of ownership, "assignment" means the transfer of the claim, right or property to another, "settlement" means settling the property, right or claim conveyance or disposition of property for the benefit of another, "delivery" contemplated therein is the delivery of ones property to another for no consideration and "payment" implies gift of money by someone to another. We do not think that a partition in a H.U.F. can be considered either as "disposition" or "conveyance" or "assignment" or "settlement" or "delivery or "payment" or "alienation within the meaning of those words in S. 2 (xxiv)."
We see no reason why we should not place the same interpretation on the word disposition in Section 24 of the Act:
10. For the reasons mentioned above thus appeal is allowed. The answer given by the High Court to the question referred to it is vacated and in its place we answer that question in the negative and in favour of the Revenue. The respondent shall pay the costs of the appellant in this Court.
11. Appeal allowed.
Advocates List
For the Appearing Parties ----------
For Petitioner
- Shekhar Naphade
- Mahesh Agrawal
- Tarun Dua
For Respondent
- S. Vani
- B. Sunita Rao
- Sushil Kumar Pathak
Bench List
HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE H.R. KHANNA
HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE K.S. HEGDE
Eq Citation
(1973) 2 SCC 384
[1973] 3 SCR 897
AIR 1973 SC 2484
[1973] 89 ITR 261
1973 TAXLR 1314
(1973) 2 CTR 337
LQ/SC/1973/118
HeadNote
A. Gift Tax — Gift — Disposition — Meaning of — Partition in a HUF (Hindu undivided family) — Held, is not a disposition — Estate Duty Act, 1953, S. 24 — Words and Phrases — Meaning of quotdispositionquot — Gift Tax Act, 1958, S. 2 xxiv B. Gift Tax Act, 1958 — S. 2 xxiv — Words and Phrases — Meaning of quotdispositionquot — Gift Tax Act, 1958, S. 2 xxiv — Held, same interpretation should be placed on the word quotdispositionquot occurring in S. 24 of the Estate Duty Act, 1953 as was placed on the said word in the Gift Tax Act, 1958 — Estate Duty Act, 1953, S. 24