21 October 1997
Supreme Court
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COMMISSIONER OF WEALTH TAX,GUJARAT-III, AHMEDABAD Vs ELLIS BRIDGE GYMKHANA ETC. ETC.

Bench: SUHAS C. SEN,S. SAGHIR AHMAD
Case number: Appeal Civil 650 of 1988


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PETITIONER: COMMISSIONER OF WEALTH TAX,GUJARAT-III, AHMEDABAD

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: ELLIS BRIDGE GYMKHANA ETC. ETC.

DATE OF JUDGMENT:       21/10/1997

BENCH: SUHAS C. SEN, S. SAGHIR AHMAD

ACT:

HEADNOTE:

JUDGMENT:                THE 21ST DAY OF OCTOBER, 1997 Present:               Hon’ble Mr. Justice Suhas C. Sen               Hon’ble Mr. Justice S.Saghir Ahmad T.A.Ramachandran K.N.   Shukla,    Sr.Advs.,Ms.Renu    George,    B.K.Prasad, P.Parmeswaran, D.S.Mehra, S.N.Terdol, K.J.John, Ms. Manju Mishra, R.A.Perumal, S. Sukumaran, S.K.Pasi, Mrs.   Janki    Ramachandran,   Mukul   Mudgal,   (Mrs.   M. Karanjawala,)  Adv.   (NP),  S.S.Khanduja,  Y.P.Dhingra  and B.K.satija, Advs. with them for the appearing parties.                       J U D G M E N T      The following Judgment of the Court was delivered: [WITH C.A.  Nos. 3210-14/88,  1544/93, 1649/93,  5340-48/93, 5393/94,  948/95,   8347/95,  1796-1799/96,   SLP  (C)  Nos. 2490/84, C.A.Nos. 4674/95, 2517/96, 9096/96, 3532-38/88, SLP (C) Nos.  7246-7250/97, C.A.Nos.2366-2375/94,  SLP (C)  Nos. 16259-16275/94 with C.A. No.658/93 with C.A. Nos. 7420-22 of 1997 @ SLP (C) Nos. 4658-60/1990                       J U D G M E N T SEN, J.      This is  an appeal  from an  order passed  by the  High Court of  Gujarat in  which following  question of  law  was answered in the affirmative and in favour of the assessee:      "Whether on  the facts  and in  the      circumstance  of   the  case,   the      Appellate Tribunal  has been  right      in law in holding that the assessee      is not  liable to  Wealth Tax under      Wealth-tax  Act,   1957   for   the      assessment year in question?"      The assessment  years involved  are 1970-71 to 1977-78. The assessee  is a club. It filed its return of wealth being called upon  to do so for the aforesaid assessment years but contended that  it was  not liable  to be assessed under the Wealth Tax Act, 1957 at all. The Wealth Tax Officer rejected the  claim   of  the   assessee.  The   Appellate  Assistant Commissioner was  of the view that the assessee could not be brought to tax under the Act because of the earlier decision of Gujarat  High Court  in the case of Orient Club v. Wealth

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Tax Officer,  123 ITR 395. The Tribunal dismissed the appeal upholding the order of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner. The question  of law  raised by  the Revenue was answered by the High Court also in favour of the assessee.      The Club  was not incorporated under the Companies Act, 1956. The  case of the Revenue is that the club will have to be assessed  as an  "individual" under  the Wealth  Tax Act. Section 3  which is  the charging  section of  the Act is as under:      "3.  (1)   Subject  to   the  other      provisions contained  in this  Act,      there shall  be charged  for  every      assessment year  commencing on  and      from the  first day  of April, 1957      but before  the first day of April,      1993, a  tax (hereinafter  referred      to as wealth-tax) in respect of the      net  wealth  on  the  corresponding      valuation date of every individual.      Hindu undivided  family and company      at the  rate or  rates specified in      Schedule 1.      (2)          x                    x      x"      Three units  of assessment  have been  mentioned in the charging section;  "individual, Hindu  undivided family  and company". The contention of the Revenue is that "individual" has to be understood broadly so as to include as association of persons like clubs.      The rule  of construction of a charging section is that before taxing  any person,  it must  be shown  that he falls within the ambit of the charging section by clear words used in the  section. No  one can  be  taxed  by  implication.  A charging section  has to  be construed strictly. If a person has not  been brought  within  the  ambit  of  the  charging section by clear words, he cannot be taxed at all.      Unlike Income  Tax Act  which is also a direct tax, the charging section  does not speak of a body of individuals or an association  of persons  or a  firm. If  the  legislative intent was  to tax the wealth of a body of individuals or an association of persons or a firm, the Legislature would have said so  in so  many words  as was done in the Indian Income Tax Act,  1922 or  Income Tax  Act, 1961. Under Section 3 of the  Indian   Income  Tax  Act,  1922,  the  charge  was  on "individual,  Hindu   undivided   family,   company,   local authority, firm  and other  association of  persons  or  the partners of  a  firm  or  the  members  of  the  association individually". When the Wealth Tax Act, 1957 was passed, the Legislature  decided  to  specify  only  "individual,  Hindu undivided family  and company"  as units  of assessment.  It will not  be right  to  presume  that  the  Legislature  was unaware of  the wording of the charging provisions of Indian Income Tax  Act, 1922  when the  Wealth Tax Act was enacted. The Legislature  must be  presumed to  have known  the large number of  cases that were heard and decided on the scope of the charging section under the Indian Income Tax Act and the meaning ascribed  to "association  of persons"  therein. The Legislature, however, decided to exclude "firms, association of persons and body of individuals" from the ambit of charge of Wealth  Tax. What  has been  specifically left out by the Legislature cannot  be brought  back within the ambit of the charging section  by implication or by ascribing an extended meaning to  the word  "individual" so as to include whatever has been left out.      It has also to be noted that the charge under the Gift-

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Tax Act,  1958, a  contemporaneous statute is on a gift made by a "person". "Person" has ben defined by Section 2 (xviii) as under:      "‘person’    includes    a    Hindu      undivided family or a company or an      association   or    a    body    of      individuals  or   persons,  whether      incorporated or not"      Moreover, in  the Income Tax Act, 1961, Section 4 which is the charging section imposes a tax on the total income of every person.  ‘Person’ has  been defined by Section 2(3) of the Act as under:      "(31) ‘person’ includes-      (i) individual,      (ii) a Hindu undivided family,      (iii) a company,      (iv) a firm,      (v) an  association of persons or a      body   of    individuals,   whether      incorporated or not,      (vi) a local authority, and      (vii)  every  artificial  juridical      person, not  falling within  any of      the preceding sub-clauses."      It will  be seen  from the  above that  just  like  the Indian Income  Tax Act,  1922, in the Gift Tax Act, 1958 and the Income  Tax Act, 1961, an association of persons or body of individuals have been specifically brought in as units of assessment. It  is only under the Wealth Tax Act, the charge is on  "every  individual,  Hindu  undivided  family  and  a company" and  not on  association of  persons or  a body  of individuals or  a firm.  If the language of Section 3 of the Wealth Tax  Act is  contrasted with  the provisions of other cognate statutes  it will  clearly appear that the intention of the  legislature was  not  to  treat  an  association  of persons or  a body  of individuals  or a  firm as an unit of assessment for  the purpose  of imposition  of  Wealth  Tax. There is  no other explanation why these units of assessment which have  been specifically  made taxable under the Indian Income Tax  Act, 1922, the Gift Tax Act, 1958 and Income Tax Act, 1961  have been left out of the charging section of the Wealth Tax Act.      It is also to be noted that when the Wealth Tax Act was passed in  1957, Indian  Income Tax  Act, 1922 was in force. The scheme  and structure  of the  Wealth Tax  Act are  very similar to  the Act of 1922. In fact, some of the provisions of Wealth  Tax Act  are almost  verbatim reproduction of the corresponding provisions  of  the  Indian  Income  Tax  Act, 1922.      The charge  of wealth  tax imposed  by Section  3 is in respect of  the net  wealth on  the corresponding  valuation date of  every individual,  Hindu undivided  family and  the Company. Valuation  date has been defined by Section 2(q) to mean the last day of the previous year as defined in Section 3 of  the Income-tax  Act, if  an assessment  was to be made under that  Act for  that year.  Proviso(i) to  Section 2(q) lays down  that where  in the  case of an assessee there are different  previous  years  under  the  Income-tax  Act  for different sources  of income,  the valuation  date  for  the purposes of  this Act  shall be  the last day of the last of the previous  year. This  proviso was  deleted by the Direct Tax Laws (Amendment) Act, 1987, with effect from 1.4.1989.      Section 2(b)  defines Appellate  Tribunal to  mean  the Tribunal constituted under Section 252 of the Indian Income- tax Act.  Various  authorities  under  the  Act  like  Chief

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Commissioner,  Commissioner,   Additional  Commissioner   of Income Tax,  Assistant Commissioner  of Income Tax have been given the  meanings  respectively  assigned  to  them  under Section 2  of the  Income-tax   Act. Section  16(3)  of  the Indian Income-tax  Act, 1922 lays down that in computing the total  income   of  any   individual  for   the  purpose  of assessment, the  income of  a wife  or minor  child of  such individual will  have to be included if he wife is member of a firm  of which  the husband  is a partner or if a minor is admitted to  the benefit  of the  partnership of  which  the father of the minor is a partner. There were also provisions for including  in the  income of  an  assessee  income  from assets  transferred  directly  or  indirectly  to  his  wife otherwise than  for adequate  consideration or in connection with an  agreement to  live  apart.  Lastly,  Section  16(3) provides that  an income from assets transferred by a person for the  benefit of  his wife  or  a  minor  child  or  both otherwise than  for adequate  consideration will be included in the  income of  the person  concerned. Similar provisions have been made in Section 4 (1) (a) of the Wealth Tax Act.      Section 8  of the  Wealth Tax  Act  provides  that  the Income Tax  authorities specified  under Section  116 of the Income Tax  Act shall  be the Wealth Tax authorities for the purposes of  the Wealth  Tax Act  and every  such  authority shall exercise  the powers  and perform the functions of the Wealth Tax  authority in  respect of  any individual,  Hindu Undivided Family  or a  Company, and  for this  purpose  his jurisdiction shall  be the  same as  he had under the Income Tax Act  by virtue  of orders  or  directions  issued  under Section 120  of that  Act or  under any  other provisions of that Act.  Section 8B  confers power of transfer of cases on the Commissioner from one officer to another. This provision is almost  identical with the provisions of sub-section (7A) of Section 5 of the Income Tax Act. Chapter IV of the Wealth Tax Act deals with assessment and the provisions are similar to the  corresponding provisions  of the  Income Tax  Act. A return of  wealth has  to be filed by an assessee if his net wealth exceeded  the maximum  amount which is not chargeable to wealth  tax in  the prescribed  form and  verified in the prescribed manner  on or  before the "due date". Explanation to Section  14 clarified  that "due  date"  in  relation  to assessee under  this Act  shall be  the same  date  as  that applicable to an assessee under the Income Tax Act under the Explanation to  sub-section (1) of Section 139 of the Income Tax Act.      Just as  in the  Income Tax Act, 1922 Section 15 of the Wealth Tax  Act provides  that if any person does not file a return within  the time  prescribed by the statute or having furnished  a   return,  discovers   any  omission  or  wrong statement in  the return, he may furnish a revised return at any time  before the  expiry of  one year  from end  of  the relevant assessment  year or  before the  completion of  the assessment whichever  is earlier.  There are  provisions for provisional  assessment   under  Section  15C  similarly  to Section 23B  of the  Indian Income Tax Act, 1992. Section 16 which deals  with assessment is similar to Section 23 of the Income Tax  Act.  After  completion  of  assessment  if  the assessing office  has reason  to believe that the net wealth chargeable to tax has escaped assessment, he is empowered to issue a  notice under  sub-section (1)  of Section 17. These provisions  are   similar  to  corresponding  provisions  of Section 34  of the  Income Tax  Act  of  1992.  The  penalty provisions in  Section  18  are  similar  to  provisions  of Section 28  of the  Income Tax  Act. Provisions  for  appeal against an  order of  assessment of  penalty are provided by

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Section 23.  There are also provisions for further appeal to the Appellate  Tribunal. The  Commissioner  has  been  given power  to   revise  orders  on  his  own  motion  pr  on  an application made by the assessee under Section 25. All these provisions  are   almost   identically   worded   with   the corresponding provisions  of the  Income Tax  Act,  1922.  A reference lies  from an  order of  the Appellate Tribunal to the High  Court under  Section 27 in respect of any question of law  arising out  of the  appellate order. From the order passed by the High Court on reference, an appeal lies to the Supreme Court under Section 29.      All these provisions go to show that the Wealth Tax Act has been drafted on the same lines as the Indian Income Tax, 1922. There  is great  similarity  of  wording  between  the various provisions  of  Wealth  Tax  Act  and  corresponding provisions of  Indian Income  Tax Act, 1922. But in the case of the  charging Section  3  of  the  Wealth  Tax  Act,  the phraseology of  the charging  section 3 of Indian Income Tax Act, 1922 has not been adopted. Unlike Section  3 of  the Income  Tax Act,  Section 3 of the Wealth Tax  Act does not mention a firm or an association of persons  or   a  body   individuals  as   taxable  units  of assessment.      The position  has been placed beyond doubt by insertion of Section 21AA in the Wealth Tax Act itself. This amendment was effected  by the  Finance Act,  1981  with  effect  from 1.4.1981. It  provides  for  assessment  of  association  of persons in  certain special cases and not otherwise. Section 21AA is:      "Assessment when assets are held by      certain association of persons      21AA. (1)  Where assets  chargeable      to tax  under this  Act are held by      an association  of  persons,  other      than  a   company  or  co-operative      society or society registered under      the  Societies   Registration  Act,      1860 (21  of 1860) or under any law      corresponding to  that Act in force      in  any  part  of  India,  and  the      individual shares of the members of      the said  association in the income      or  assets  or  both  of  the  said      association  on  the  date  of  its      formation or at any time thereafter      are indeterminate  or unknown,  the      wealth-tax shall be levied upon and      recovered from  such association in      the like  manner and  to  the  same      extent as it would be leviable upon      and recoverable  from an individual      who  is  a  citizen  of  India  and      resident in  India for the purposes      of this Act.      (2)   Where    any   business    or      profession   carried   on   by   an      association of  persons referred to      in   sub-section   (1)   has   been      discontinued    or    where    such      association    of     persons    is      dissolved,  the  Assessing  Officer      shall make an assessment of the net      wealth  of   the   association   of      persons    as     if    no     such      discontinuance or  dissolution  had

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    taken place  and all the provisions      of this had taken place and all the      provisions of  this Act,  including      the provisions relating to the levy      of  penalty   or  any   other   sum      chargeable under  any provisions of      this Act,  so far  as may be, shall      apply to such assessment.      (3)  Without   prejudice   to   the      generality  of  the  provisions  of      sub-section (2),  if the  Assessing      Officer or  the Deputy Commissioner      (Appeals)   or   the   Commissioner      (appeals)  in  the  course  of  any      proceedings  under   this  Act   in      respect of  any such association of      persons as  is referred  to in sub-      section (1)  is satisfied  that the      association of  persons was  guilty      of any  of the  acts  specified  in      section 18  or section  18a, he may      impose or  direct the imposition of      a penalty  in accordance  with  the      provisions of the said sections.      (4) Every  person who  was  at  the      time  of   such  discontinuance  or      dissolution   a   member   of   the      association  of  persons,  and  the      legal representative  of  any  such      person who  is deceased,  shall  be      jointly and severally liable for he      amount of tax, penalty or other sum      payable, and  all the provisions of      this Act,  so far  as may be, shall      apply to  any  such  assessment  or      imposition of penalty or other sum.      (5) Where  such  discontinuance  or      dissolution takes  place after  any      proceedings  in   respect   of   an      assessment year have commenced, the      proceedings   may    be   continued      against the  persons referred to in      sub-section (4)  from the  stage at      which the  proceedings stood at the      time  of   such  discontinuance  or      dissolution, and all the provisions      of this  Act shall,  so far  as may      be, apply accordingly."      It will  be seen  that assessment  as an association of persons can  be made  only when  the  individual  shares  of members of  the association  in the income or assets or both of the association on the date of  its formation or any time thereafter are  indeterminate or unknown. It is only in such an  eventually   that  an  assessment  can  be  made  on  an association of  persons, otherwise  not. Sub-section  (2) of Section 21AA  deals  with  cases  of  such  associations  as mentioned in sub-section (1). That means only association of persons in  which individual  shares  of  the  members  were unknown or  indeterminate can  be subjected  to wealth  tax. Sub-section (3)  also  deals  with  association  of  persons referred to  in sub-section  (1). Sub-sections  (4) and  (5) deal with some consequences which will follow the members of an association  of persons  spoken of  in sub-section (1) in the case of discontinuance of dissolution.      It is  not the  case of  the Revenue before us that the

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members of  the club  were unknown or that their interest in the assets  of the  club  was  indeterminate.  In  fact,  or argument was advanced on this aspect of the matter in any of the cases  that have  come for hearing along with this case. In fact,  a list  of members  of the  club should be readily available. In  any event,  there is  no finding of fact that particulars of members were unknown or their interest in the assets of the club were indeterminate.      In our  view, Section 21AA far from helping the case of the  Revenue   directly  goes  against  its  contention.  An association of  persons cannot be taxed at all under Section 3 of  the Act.  That is why an amendment was necessary to be made by  the Finance  Act, 1981  whereby  Section  21AA  was inserted to  bring to  tax net  wealth of  an association of persons where  individual  shares  of  the  members  of  the association were unknown or indeterminate.      We were  referred to a large number of cases. It is not necessary to  deal with them in detail. It may be noted that the Gujarat  High Court in the case of Orient Club v. Wealth Tax Officer,  123 ITR  395 and  the Bombay High Court in the case of  Orient Club  v. Commissioner of Wealth Tax, 136 ITR 697 were  of the  view that  the charging  provisions of the Wealth Tax  had not  treated a  firm or  an  association  of persons as  a taxable  unit. An unincorporated members’ club was a  society of  persons and  did not  have any  existence apart  from  the  members  of  which  it  was  composed.  An unincorporated club  being an  association of  persons could not be  brought to tax as an individual under the Wealth Tax Act. The  Kerala High  Court in  the case of Commissioner of Wealth Tax  v. Mulam  Club, 191  ITR 370 has taken a similar view.      A contrary  view was  taken by the Madras High Court in the case  of Coimbatore  Club v. Wealth Tax Officer, 153 ITR 172 where  it was  held  that  the  expression  "individual" occurring in Section 3 of the Act was wide enough to include within its scope a plurality of individuals forming a single collective  unit  even  though  formed  without  any  profit motive.      In our  judgment, the  Kerala High Court in the case of Commissioner of Wealth Tax v. Mulam Club (supra), the Bombay High Court  in the  case of  Orient club  v. Commissioner of Wealth Tax (supra) and the Gujarat High Court in the case of Orient Club  v. Wealth  Tax Officer  (supra) have  come to a right decision. The judgment of the Madras High Court in the case  of   Coimbatore  Club   (supra)  to  the  contrary  is erroneous.  The   Madras  High   Court  has  overlooked  the significance of  omission of firms or association of persons or a  body of  individuals from  the charging  section  even though these  entities were  specifically made taxable under various direct  tax enactments  from 1922 to 1961. Moreover, the Wealth  Tax Assessment  of an  individual  will  involve computation of  "net wealth". All the assets belonging to an individual will  have to  be included. If an individual is a partner of  a firm  or member  of an Association of persons, the value  of his  share in  these entities  will have to be included in  his  individual  assessment.  We  have  already examined the  scheme of  the Wealth  Tax Act  and  also  the object behind  the insertion of Section 21AA. All these will go to  show, the legislature deliberately excluded a firm or an association  of persons from the charge of wealth tax and the word  "individual" in  the charging  section  cannot  be stretched to  include entities  which had  been deliberately left out of the charge.      Strong reliance  was placed  on the  judgment  of  this Court in Wealth Tax Officer, Calicut vs. C.M.Mammed Kayi 129

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ITR 307.  In that  case, the  question was  whether  Mapilla Marumkkathayam tarwards  of North Malabar - Muslim undivided families governed by their Marumkkathayam Act (Madras Act 17 of 1939)  - fell within the expression "individual" and were assessable to  tax under  section 3  of the  Wealth Tax Act, 1957.      The   contention   in   that   case   was   about   the constitutionality of  the charging Section of the Wealth Tax Act. The  challenge was  on two grounds; (a) that Parliament was not  competent to  include an  Hindu Undivided Family in the charging  Section 3 of the Act in view of Entry 86, List I of  the Seventh  Schedule of the Constitution and (b) that the charge  of wealth tax on an Hindu Undivided Family Under Section 3  of the  Act was  violative of  Article 14  of the Constitution. Entry  86 in List I of the Seventh Schedule of the Constitution  is "Taxes  on the  capital  value  of  the assets, exclusive  of agricultural  land, of individuals and companies; taxes  on the  capital of  companies".  The  High Court rejected  the challenge  on the  first ground and held that Parliament  was competent to include an Hindu Undivided Family in  Section 3  of the  Act as  constituting a body or group of individuals coming within the term "individuals" in entry 86. However, the challenge on the ground of Article 14 was upheld.  The High  Court was  of the view that there was discrimination as  between an  Hindu  Undivided  Family  and Muslim Mapilla  Tarwards which  were also undivided families and, therefore,  the charging  section so far as it governed undivided families  was hit  by Article  14. The  Department came up  in appeal before this Court and by a judgment dated February 17,  1964, this  Court set  aside the  judgment and order of  the High  Court and  remanded the case back to the High Court  to consider  whether Article  14 applied  to the case or  not after giving the parties further opportunity to put forward their cases supported by facts and figures.      On  remand,   out  of  the  two  contentions  initially advanced  by   the  assessee,  the  first  relating  to  the constitutionality of the Act in relation to Entry 86, List I had become  academic because  the point  was dealt  with and overruled by this Court in the case of Banarsi Das v. Wealth Tax Officer,  56 ITR  224 (S.C).  Therefore, only the second contention regarding  validity  of  the  charge  imposed  by Section  3   survived.  A  Special  Bench  of  three  Judges ultimately rejected  the challenge  and held  that Section 3 was not  violative of  Article 14.  But the three judges, by different  reasonings   held  that   non-HUFs  like  Mapilla Tarwards fell  altogether outside the scope of the charge of Section 3.  The Revenue once again came up in appeal to this Court.  The   Court  drew   distinction  between  canons  of construction applicable  to entries in the legislative lists and canons  of construction  applicable to construction of a charging section in a taxing statute. It was explained:      "It cannot  be  disputed  that  the      canon of construction applicable to      entries in  the  three  Legislative      Lists occurring  in a  Constitution      would be  different from  the canon      of construction that would apply to      terms  or  expressions  used  in  a      taxing statute.  The object  of  an      entry in  any legislative  field as      possible by  the use of compendious      words or expressions while the rule      of  construction  applicable  to  a      taxing statute must ensure hat "the      subject is  not to  be taxed unless

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    the language of the statute clearly      imposes the  obligation" [per  Lord      Simonds in  Russel v.  Scott (1948)      AC 422 (HL)."      The Court  further held  that the  point in controversy has to  be examined  having regard  to the general scheme of the Wealth  Tax Act  which was to assess all persons who had wealth beyond  the statutory limit. The presumption would be equality of  incidence  rather  than  exemption  of  a  few. Secondly, it  was observed that the term "individual" can be read in  plural and as such would include a body or group of individuals like  a Mapilla  Tarwad. Thirdly,  there was  no warrant for  suggesting that  the two terms of "individuals" and "Hindu  Undivided Family"  had been  used in  antithesis with each other. Section 3 being the charging provisions was merely concerned  with specifying  different assessing units for the  purpose of  assessment of wealth. There could be no dispute  that   the  Legislature  was  competent  to  select persons,  properties,   transactions  and  objects  for  the imposition of  a levy  and for that purpose classify as many different assessing  units  as  it  could  reasonably  think necessary  and   that  is  how  the  three  assessing  units "individual" "Hindu  Undivided Family"  and "Company" (which was later  omitted) came  to be  specified in Section 3. The Court concluded:      "In our  view, the specific mention      of an  HUF in  the section does not      result in the exclusion of group of      individuals who only form a unit by      reason  of   their  birth   like  a      Mapilla tarward  from the operation      of the  section. It is difficult to      accept the  argument  that  if  the      term "individual"  was intended  to      include joint families or undivided      families  it   was   redundant   to      specify HUFs."      The Court  thereafter pointed  out that this conclusion accorded with  legislative history  of the taxing statues in the country. Mapilla Tarwards have been consistently treated and taxed  in the  status  of  "individuals"  under  various taxing statutes.  Reference was  made to the Expenditure Tax Act, 1957  under which  a similar question was considered by this Court  in the case of V. Venugopala Ravi Varma Rajah v. union of  India, 74  ITR 49 (SC). In that case, the question was whether  a Mapilla  Tarwad in  North Malabar  had to  be treated as Hindu undivided family for the purpose of levy of expenditure tax.  Expenditure tax  was levied  in respect of "expenditure incurred  by any  individual or Hindu undivided family in  the previous  year" (Section 3 of the Expenditure Tax Act).  It was  held by  this Court  that Mapilla  Tarwad could   not be  assessed to  tax  in  the  status  of  Hindu undivided family.  However, it  was liable  to pay tax as an individual. It was pointed out:      "Under the  taxing Acts  the scheme      of treating  Hindu undivided family      as a  distinct taxable  entity  has      been adopted for a long time, e.g.,      the Indian Income-tax Act, 1869 (IX      of  1869),  the  Indian  Income-tax      Act, 1870  (IX of 1870), the Indian      Income-Tax Act, 1871 (XII of 1871),      Act No. VIII of 1872, Act No. II of      1886, Act  No. VII of 1912, Act No.      XI of 1922, Act No.43 of 1961, have

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    treated a Hindu undivided family as      a    distinct    taxable    entity.      Similarly,  under   the  Wealth-tax      Act, 1957  (27 of  1957),  and  the      Gift-tax Act,  1958 (18  of  1958),      the Hindu  undivided family is made      a  unit   of  taxation.  Under  the      Business Profits  Tax Act, 1947 (21      of 1947),  and the  Excess  Profits      Tax  Act,   1940,  also  the  Hindu      undivided family was made a unit of      taxation. For the purposes of these      Acts Mapilla  tarwards governed  by      the Marumakkathayam  law have  been      regarded as individuals." (Emphasis supplied)      On the  basis of  the reasoning  given in  the case  of Venugopala (supra),  this Court had no difficulty in holding that having  regard to  the legislative  history of  revenue laws, Mapilla  Tarward had  to be  assessed  to  tax  as  an "individual".      The  Court  laid  special  emphasis  on  the  aforesaid passage in the judgment of Venugopala’s case, and reiterated that for  the purpose  of various  tax laws  set out in that passage "Mapilla  tarwards governed  by the  Marumakkathayam law have been regarded as individuals".      This judgment  took note  of the  fact that long before the Wealth  Tax Act  was passed  Mapilla Tarwad families had been treated as distinct taxable entities and had been taxed as individuals  under various tax laws for a very long time. Therefore, "individual"  in Section  3 of the Wealth Tax Act must be given the same meaning as was given in various other tax laws so as to include a Mapilla Tarward family .      This judgment  really goes  against the contention made on behalf  of the  Revenue. The Court first laid down that a charging section  of a  taxing statute  has to  be  strictly construed. The  Court found  that the  charging  section  of various taxing  statutes had  imposed tax on Hindu Undivided Families as well as on "individuals". It has been held under various fiscal  statues that Mapilla Tarwads cannot be taxed as a  Hindu undivided family but will have to be taxed as an "individual". If "individual" is understood under the Wealth Tax Act,  in the  same sense in which it has been understood in various  fiscal statutes, then "individual" under Section 3 of  the Wealth  Tax Act will include a Mapilla Tarwad. But in  the   various  tax   Acts  mentioned  in  that  judgment ‘individual’ has  not been  interpreted to include a firm or an association of persons.      That the  charging section  of the  Wealth Tax Act does not impose  a charge on a firm or association of persons has been made  clear by  explanatory  notes  on  the  provisions relating to  direct taxes  issued by  the Central  Board  of Direct Taxes  on June  29, 1981 clarifying the Finance Bill, 1981. The  idea behind  introduction of the new Section 21AA was explained in the following words:      "21.1  Under  the  Wealth-tax  Act,      1957,   individuals    and    Hindu      undivided  families   are   taxable      entities  but   an  association  of      persons is  not charged  to wealth-      tax on  its net  wealth.  Where  an      individual  or  a  Hindu  undivided      family   is    a   member   of   an      association of  persons, the  value      of the  interest of  such member in

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    the  association   of  persons   is      determined in  accordance with  the      provisions  of  the  rules  and  is      includible in the net wealth of the      member.      21.2  Instances  had  come  to  the      notice  of   the  Government  where      certain assessees  had resorted  to      the creation  of a  large number of      associations  of   persons  without      specifically defining the shares of      the members  therein with a view to      avoiding  proper   tax   liability.      Under the existing provisions, only      the value  of the  interest of  the      member in  the association which is      ascertainable is  includible in his      net  wealth.  Accordingly,  to  the      extent the value of the interest of      the  member   in  the   association      cannot   be   ascertained   or   is      unknown, no  wealth-tax is  payable      by such member in respect thereof.      21.3   In  order  to  counter  such      attempts at  tax avoidance  through      the medium of multiple associations      of  persons  without  defining  the      shares of  the members, the Finance      Act has inserted a new Section 21AA      in the  Wealth-tax Act  to  provide      for  assessment   in  the  case  of      associations of  persons  which  do      not  define   the  shares   of  the      members in the assets thereof. Sub-      section  (1)  provides  that  where      assets chargeable to wealth-tax are      held by  an association  of persons      (other than  a  company  or  a  co-      operative    society)    and    the      individual shares of the members of      the said  association is  income or      the assets  of the  association  on      the date of its formation or at any      time thereafter,  are indeterminate      or  unknown,   wealth-tax  will  be      levied upon  and  recovered    from      such association in the like manner      and to  the same  extent as  it  is      leviable who  is a citizen of India      and is  resident in  India  at  the      rates  specified   in  Part   I  of      Schedule I  or at the rate of 3 per      cent,  whichever   course  is  more      beneficial to the revenue."      It will  appear from this notification that the Central Board of  Direct Taxes clearly recognised that the charge of wealth tax  was on  individuals and Hindu undivided families and not  on any  other body of individuals or association of persons. Section 21AA has been introduced to prevent evasion of tax.  In a  normal case,  in assessment of an individual, his wealth  from every  source will be added up and computed in accordance  with provisions  of the  Wealth  Tax  Act  to arrive at  the net-wealth  which has  to be taxed. So, if an individual has  any interest  in a  firm or  any other  non- corporate  body,  then  his  interest  in  those  bodies  or

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associations will  be added  up in  his wealth.  it is  only where such  addition is  not possible  because the shares of the individual  in a  body holding  property is  unknown  or indeterminate, resort  will be  taken to  Section  21AA  and association of  individuals will  be taxed as association of persons.      In the  instant case,  we are concerned with assessment years 1970-71  to 1977-78.  Section 21AA  was not  in  force during the relevant assessment period. There was no way that a club  could be  assessed as  an association  of persons in these assessment  years. It  is not  even the  case  of  the Revenue that  individual member’s  interest in  the club was indeterminate or unknown.      In view  of the  aforesaid, the  appeal must  fail. The question referred  by the tribunal was correctly answered by the High  Court in  the affirmative  and in  favour  of  the assesee. The  appeal is dismissed. There will be no order as to costs. C.A. Nos. 3210-14/88, 1544/93, 1649/93, 5340/48/93, 5393/94, 948/95, 8347/95, 1796-1799/96, SLP (C) No. 2490/84, C.A.Nos. 2517/96, 9096/96,  SLP (C) Nos. 7246-7250/97, C.A.Nos. 2366- 2375/94, SLP (C) Nos. 16259-16275/94 with C.A. No.658/93      In view  of our  decision in  C.A. No.650  of 1988, the above appeals and Special Leave Petitions are also dismissed with no order as to costs. C.A.Nos.467/95, C.A.Nos.3532-38/1988 & C.A.Nos. 7420-22 of 1997 arising out of S.L.P. Nos. 4658-60/1990      Leave granted.      The appeals are allowed.