19 July 1966
Supreme Court
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FATEHCHAND MURLIDHAR AND ANR. Vs COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, CALCUTTA

Case number: Appeal (civil) 1108-1110 of 1964


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PETITIONER: FATEHCHAND MURLIDHAR AND ANR.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, CALCUTTA

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 19/07/1966

BENCH:

ACT: Income-tax   Act  (11  of  1922),  s.   23(5)(a)-Scope   of- Partnership Sub-partnership between a partner and strangers- Agreement  to  share profits and losses of  partner  in  the Partnership--Income from the Partnership-Whether belongs  to partner or sub-partnership.

HEADNOTE: The assessee was a partner in a registered firm.  In 1949 he entered  into a partnership with persons who were  strangers to  the  registered  firm  and a  deed  of  partnership  was executed  between  them.  It recited that  the  profits  and losses for the share of the assessee in the registered  firm should  belong to the new firm and be divided and  borne  by the  partners of the new firm in accordance with the  shares specified in the deed. On the question whether the income of the assessee from  the registered firm for the years 1952-53, 1953-54 and  1955-56, should be included in his individual assessment, HELD:-The income should be included in the assessment of the  new  firm  and not in the personal  assessment  of  the assessee, (i)The  new partnership constituted a  sub-partnership  in respect of the assessee’s share in the registered firm.  (In the  case of a subpartnership, it creates a  superior  title and  diverts the income before it becomes the income of  the partner, that is, the partner in the main firm receives  the income  not  only  on his own behalf but on  behalf  of  the partners  in  the sub-partnership,.  The fact  that  a  sub- partner  can have no direct claim to the  profits  vis-a-vis the  other  partners  of the main firm and that  it  is  the partner  alone who is entitled to the profits vis-a-vis  the other  partners  in the main firm, does not  show  that  the changed  character of the partner should not be  taken  into consideration for income-tax purposes. [461E-F; 462C] (ii)The  object  of s. 23(5)(a) is not to assess  the  firm itself  but  to  apportion  the  income  among  the  various partners.   After  the  income  has  been  apportioned,  the Income-tax Officer has to find whether it is the partner who is  assessable or whether the income should be taken  to  be the  real  income of some other person.  If it is  the  real income  of another firm, it is that firm which is liable  to be  assessed  under the section.  There is  nothing  in  the section  that prevents the income of the assessee  from  the registered  firm  being treated as the income  of  the  sub- partnership and the section being applied again. [463C, F] Charandas  Haridas v. Commissioner of Income Tax,  [1960]  3 S.C.R.  296,  and  Commissioner of  Income  Tax,  Bombay  v. Sitaldas Tirathdas [1961] 3 S.C.R. 634, followed.

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Commissioner  of Income Tax, Punjab v. Laxmi Trading Co.  24 I.T.R. 173 and Ratilal B. Daftari v. Commissioner of  Income Tax:-, Bombay, 36 I.T.R. 18, referred to. Mahaliram Santhalia v. Commissioner of Income Tax 33  I.T.R. 261, overruled. 454

JUDGMENT: CIVIL  APPELLATE  JURISDICTION:- Civil Appeal Nos.  1108  to 1110 of 1964. Appeals  by special leave from the judgment and order  dated August  1,  1962 of the Calcutta High  Court  in  Income-tax Reference Nos. 20 and 21 of 1959. A.K.  Sen,  S. C. Mazumdar and J. Datta  Gupta,  for  the appellants. R.M.  Hazarnavis, R. Ganapathy Iyer and R.  N.  Sachthey, for the respondent. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Sikri,  J.  These  appeals by  special  leave  are  directed against  the judgment of the High Court of Calcutta  in  two cases  referred to it by the Income Tax Appellate  Tribunal, Calcutta Bench, under s. 66(1) of the Indian Income-tax  Act (XI  of  1922)  hereinafter called the  Act).   One  of  the references (Income Tax Reference No. 20 of 1959) was made at the  instance  of M/s Fatehchand Murlidhar,  and  the  other (Income  Tax  Reference  No. 21 of 1959)  was  made  at  the instance  of  Shri  Murlidhar Himatsingka.   In  the  former reference  the question referred was "whether on  the  facts and  in  the  circumstances  of  the  case,  the  income  of Murlidhar  Himatsingka for his share in the firm of  Messrs. Basantlal Ghanshyamdas for the assessment years 1952-53  and 1953-54  was  rightly  excluded  from  the  income  of   the applicant  firm".   In  the latter  reference  the  question referred was "whether on the facts and circumstances of  the case  the income of Murlidhar Himatsingha for his  share  in the   firm  of  Messrs.   Basantlal  Ghanshyamdas  for   the assessment year 1955-56 was rightly included in his personal assessment for that year". The  facts and circumstances out of which  these  references were  made  are common because the real question  raised  by these   references  is  whether  the  income  of   Murlidhar Himatsingka, from the firm of M/s Basantlal Ghanshyamdas, in which  he was a partner, should be included in his  personal assessment  or in the assessment of the firm  of  Fatehchand Murlidhar,  to which Murlidhar Himatsingka had purported  to assign   the   profits  and  losses   from   M/s   Basantlal Ghanshyamdas.   It is sufficient to take the facts from  the statement  of  the case in Income Tax Reference  No.  21  of 1959, made at the instance of Murlidhar Himatsingka.  Murli- dhar Himatsingka was carrying on business in shellac,  jute, hessian  etc.  under  the  name  and  style  of  "Fatehchand Murlidhar"  at  14/ 1, Clive Row and  71,  Burtolla  Street, Calcutta.   He  was also a partner in the  registered  firm, Messrs   Basantlal  Ghanshyamdas  having  /2/8  share.    On December 21, 1949, a deed of partnership was executed by the said  Murlidhar  Himatsingka  and  his  two  sons,  Madanlal Himatsingka and Radhaballav Himatsingka and a grandson named Mahabir Prasad Himatsingka.  The deed recited that Murlidhar Himatsingka had become too old and infirm 455 to  look after the various businesses and that Madanlal  and Radha Ballav were already practically managing the  business and  that they had signified their intention to  become  the

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partners  of  the said firm "Fatehchand Murlidhar"  and  had agreed  to contribute capital, Rupees ten  thousand,  Rupees five  thousand and Rupees five thousand  respectively.   The parties  further  agreed to become and be  partners  in  the business  mentioned in the deed.  Clause 5 of this  deed  is important for our purpose and reads as follows:-               "The  profits and losses for the share of  the               said  Murlidhar Himatsingka as partner in  the               said    partnership    firm    of    Basantlal               Ghanshyamdas  shall  belong  to  the   present               partnership and shall be divided and borne  by               the  parties  hereto in  accordance  with  the               shares as specified hereafter, but the capital               with  its assets and liabilities  will  belong               exclusively to Murlidhar Himatsingka the party               hereto  of  the  First Part  and  the  Parties               hereto  of the Second, Third and Fourth  parts               shall  have  no lien or claim  upon  the  said               share capital or assets of the party hereto of               the  first  part in the business of  the  said               Messrs Basantlal Ghanshyamdas".               Clause 10 provides:-               "The  Profits  and  losses  (if  any)  of  the               partnership   including  the  shares  of   the               profits  and  losses of the  said  partnership               firm of Basantlal Ghanshyamdas aforesaid shall               be  divided  and  borne  by  and  between  the               parties in the following manner:--               Party  hereto  of  the  First  Part-Six  annas               (Murlidhar Himatsingka).               Party  hereto  of the Second  Part-Four  annas               (Madanlal Himatsingka).               Party  hereto  of the Third  Part-Three  annas               (Radhaballav Himatsingka).               Party  hereto of the Fourth  Part-Three  annas               (Mahabirprasad Himatsingka). Clause   11  provides  that  "all  partnership  moneys   and securities for money shall as and when received be paid into and deposited to the credit of the partnership account".  In clause 13 it is provided that "the party hereto of the First Part  shall  have  the sole control  and  direction  of  the partnership business and his opinion shall prevail if  there be  any  dispute  between the parties  hereto".   Clause  16 provides  that  "the net profits of  the  partnership  after payment  of all outgoings interest on capital or  loans  and subject  to the creation and maintenance of any  reserve  or other  fund shall belong to the parties and the  losses,  if any,  shall  also  be  borne and  paid  by  the  parties  in proportion to their shares as stated in Clause 10 hereof". For  the  assessment  year 1955-56 the  Income  Tax  Officer included the income-from the share in the registered firm of 456 Basantlal  Ghanshyamdas  in  the  individual  assessment  of Murlidhar Himatsingka, Murlidhar Himatsingka appealed to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner.  Referring to s.  23(5)(a) of  the  Act. he held that as Murlidhar  Himatsingka  was  a partner  in the registered firm of  Basantlal  Ghanshyamdas, his share had to be assessed in his hands.  He further  held that the agreement was merely an arrangement which came into force after the profits were earned and not before they were earned.   He  held that this agreement  being  a  subsequent disposition  of profits, after they had been earned, had  to be disregarded. Murlidhar  Himatsingka appealed to the Income Tax  Appellate Tribunal.  The Appellate Tribunal heard this appeal together

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with the two appeals filed by M/s Fatehchand Murlidhar.  The Appellate Tribunal, agreeing with the views of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner, dismissed the appeal. The  High Court held that it was a case of diversion of  in- come  by Murlidhar Himatsingka after it had accrued  to  him and  it was not a diversion at the source by any  overriding interest.   In  the  result, the  High  Court  answered  the questions  in  the  affirmative  in  both  the   references. Murlidhar  Himatsingka and M/s Fatehchand  Murlidhar  having obtained special leave, the appeals are now before us. The learned counsel for the appellants, Mr. A. K. Sen,  con- tends  that a partner’s share is property capable  of  being assigned,  mortgaged,  charged and dealt with as  any  other property, and where a partner sells his share to a stranger, though  that  stranger  does not become a  partner  yet  the vendor  partner  holds  the  property  as  trustee  for  the purchaser  and  consequently  the  income  received  by  the partner  is not his income but the income of the  purchaser. He  says  that similarly if a partner assigns  part  of  his share the same result follows.  He further contends that  in this  case,  by  the  agreement  dated  December  21,  1949, Murlidhar  Himatsingka  had entered into  a  sub-partnership with his two sons and a grandson in respect of his share  in the  firm  Basantlal  Ghanshyamdas,  and  it  is  the   sub- partnership  that  is entitled to the income from  the  firm Basantlal  Ghanshyamdas  and not Murlidhar  Himatsingka  who must be taken to be acting on behalf of the firm  Fatehchand Murlidhar.  Mr. Sen further urges that the Indian Income Tax Act  taxes real income and not notional income and the  real income  in  this case belonged not to Murlidhar but  to  M/s Fatehchand Murlidhar. Mr. Hazarnavis, on the other hand, contends that this agree- ment is a mere device for dividing income which had  accrued to  Murlidhar Himatsingka among his sons and  grandson.   In the  alternative he contends that the Indian Income Tax  Act does  not contemplate the application of s. 23(5)(a)  twice. He  says  that  the firm of  Basantlal  Ghanshyamdas  was  a registered firm and the 457 Income  Tax Officer was bound. under s. 23(5)(a), to  assess Murlidhar in respect of the income received from this firm-, he could not carry this income to the assessment of  another registered  firm,  namely, Fatehchand  Murlidhar,  and  then apply s. 23(5)(a). The  first point that arises is whether the agreement  dated December  21,  1949, has succeeded in diverting  the  income from  Murlidhu’s share in M/s Basantlal Ghanshyamdas to  M/s Fatehchand  Murlidhar before it reached Murlidhar.  What  is the  effect of the agreement?  In our opinion the  agreement dated  December 21, 1949, constituted a  sub-partnership  in respect of Murlidhar’s share in M/s Basantlal  Ghanshyamdas. The High Court in this connection observed:- "At  best it could be called a sub-partnership entered  into by  Murlidhar with strangers in respect of his share of  the partnership". In  arriving at this conclusion we attach importance to  the fact  that  losses were also to be shared and the  right  to receive profits and pay losses became an asset of the  firm, Fatehchand Murlidhar. In  Commissioner of lncome-tax, Bombay v.  Sitaldas  Tirath. das,(1) Hidayatullah, J., speaking for the Court, laid  down the  following test for determining questions like  the  one posed  above.  After reviewing a number of  authorities,  he observed:-               "In our opinion, the true test is whether  the

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             amount sought to be deducted, in truth,  never               reached   the   assessee   as   his    income.               Obligations,  no  doubt, there  are  in  every               case,  but it is the nature of the  obligation               which  is  the  decisive  fact.   There  is  a               difference between an amount which a person is                             obliged  to  apply  out of his  income   and  an               amount  which by the nature of the  obligation               cannot  be said to be a part of the income  of               the assessee.  Where by the obligation  income               is diverted before it reaches the assessee, it               is   deductible;  but  where  the  income   is               required   to  be  applied  to  discharge   an               obligation  after  such  income  reaches   the               assessee,  the same consequence, in law,  does               not  follow.  It is the first kind of  payment               which can truly be excused and not the second.               The second payment is merely an obligation  to               pay  another  a portion of one’s  own  income,               which has been received and is since  applied.               The first is a case in which the income  never               reaches  the assessee, who even if he were  to               collect it, does so, not as part of his income               but for and on behalf of the person to whom it               is payable’. 458 This  test clearly shows that it is not every obligation  to apply  income  in  a  particular way  that  results  in  the diversion of income before it reaches the assessee.  In  its judgment   in   the  above  case  (Sitaldas   Tirathdas   v. Commissioner  of  Income-tax, Bombay(1) the  High  Court  of Bombay had observed:--               "It  is not essential that there should  be  a               charge,  it is quite sufficient if there is  a               legally enforceable claim". These  observations  must be treated as unsound.   The  test laid  down  by this Court is quite clear, though  like  some other tests it is not easy of application in all cases. The  other cases cited before us, namely, K. A. Ramachar  v. Commissioner  of  Income-tax,  Madras(1)  and  Provat  Kumar Mitter v. Commissioner of Income-tax, West Bengal(1) do  not assist  us in disposing of this case because the  facts  are not  similar.  Only two cases, one of the Bombay High  Court and  the  other  of  the Calcutta  High  Court,  have  close resemblance  to  the  facts  of this case  and  we  may  now consider  them.   In Ratilal B. Daftri  v.  Commissioner  of Income-tax,  Bombay(1)  the  assessee who  was  one  of  the sixteen partners in a registered partnership had contributed Rs.  25,000/-  out of the capital of  the  partnership,  Rs. 3,45,000/-.   In  order to contribute this  capital  of  Rs. 25,000/-  he had entered into an agreement with four  others on  the same date on which the registered  partnership  deed was  executed,  which provided for contribution  of  diverse sums by the four others and it was further provided in  this agreement that the five parties would share the profits  and losses  in proportion to their individual contribution.   It was  also mentioned that the terms and conditions  mentioned in  the  registered partnership were to  be  applicable  and binding  on  them.   The Bombay High  Court  held  that  the assessee  was liable to be assessed only in respect  of  his share  of  the profits of the  registered  partnership.   In coming  to  this conclusion, the High Court  relied  on  two other   decisions  of  the  same  Court,   namely,   Motilal Manekchand  v.  Commissioner of Income-tax(1)  and  Sitaldas

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Tirathdas v. Commissioner of Income-tax(1) As pointed out by the  learned  counsel for the  respondent,  Mr.  Hazarnavis, Sitaldas  Tirathdas  v. Commissioner  of  Income-tax(1)  was reversed  by  this Court in Commissioner  of  Income-tax  v. Sitaldas  Tirathdas(4)  Hidayatullah, J., at p. 374  of  his judgment  reversing the judgment of the Bombay  High  Court, had  also referred to Motilal Manekchand v. Commissioner  of Income-tax (5) but did not expressly dissent from this case. In  our  opinion the case of Ratilal B. Daftari  v.  Commis- sioner   of  Income-tax,  Bombay(1)  was  rightly   decided, although  the reasoning given by the learned Judges  of  the High  Court  has  to  some  extent  not  been  accepted   by Hidayatullah, J., in Commissioner of Income-tax v.  Sitaldas Tirathdas(3).  We say so far the follow. (1) 33 I.T.R. 390,394. (2) 42 I.T.R. 25. (3) 41 I.T.R. 624, (4) 36 I.T.B. Is. (5) 31 T.T.R. 735. (6) 41 I.T.R. 367. [1961] 3 S.C.R. 634. 459 ing reasons.  Lindley on Partnership, 12th Edition, page 99, deals with sub-partnerships as follows:--               "A   sub-partnership   is,  as  it   were,   a               partnership   within    a   partnership,    it               presupposes the existence of a partnership  to               which it is itself subordinate.  An  agreement               to   share   profits   only   constitutes    a               partnership   between  the  parties   to   the               agreement.  If, therefore, several persons are               partners  and one of them agrees to share  the               profits  derived by him with a stranger,  this               agreement does not make the stranger a partner                             in  the original firm.  The result of  such  an               agreement  is to constitute what is  called  a               sub-partnership, that is to say, it makes  the               parties to it partners inter se; but it in  no               way affects the other members of the principal               firm".               He    further states:--               "Since  the decision of the House of Lords  in               Cox v.     Hickman  (1860) 8 H.L. Cas. 268,  a               sub-partner  could not before the  Partnership               Act, 1890, be held liable to the creditors  of               the  principal  firm  by reason  only  of  his               participation  in  the  profits  thereof,  and               there is nothing in that Act to alter the  law               in this respect". Sub-partnerships   have   been  recognised  in   India   and registration  accorded to them under the Indian  Income  Tax Act.  (See  Commissioner  of  Income-tax,  Punjab  v.  Laxmi Trading Company)(1) The question then arises is whether the interest of the sub- partnership   in   the  profits  received  from   the   main partnernship is of such a nature as diverts the income  from the original partner to the sub-partnership.  Suppose that A is carrying on a business as a sole proprietor and he  takes another  person B as a partner.  There is no doubt that  the income derived by A after the date of the partnership cannot be  treated as his income; it must be treated as the  income of  the partnership consisting of A and B.  What  difference does  it  make  in principle where A is not  carrying  on  a business as a sole proprietor but as one of the partners  in a  firm?   There is no doubt that there is  this  difference

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that  the  partners  of the sub-partnership  do  not  become partners  of the original partnership.  This is because  the Law  of Partnership does not permit a partner, unless  there is an agreement to the contrary, to bring strangers into the firm  as  partners.  But as far as the  partner  himself  is concerned, after the deed of agreement of subpartnership, he cannot  treat the income as his own.  Prior to the  case  of Cox  v.  Hickman(1), sub-partners were even  liable  to  the creditors  of the original partnership.  Be that as it  may, and  whether he is treated as an assignee within, s.  29  of the Indian Partnership Act, as some cases do, a  sub-partner has  definite  enforceable rights to claim a  share  in  the profits accrued to or received by the partner. (1)24 I.T.B. 173. (2) [1860] 8 H.L. Cas. 268. 460 The   decision  of  this  Court  in  Charandas  Haridas   v. Commissioner of Income-tax (1) seems to support, at least by inference, this conclusion.  In that case the facts were  as follows.   Charandas  Haridas  was  the  karta  of  a  Hindu undivided  family  consisting of his wife, his  three  minor sons  and himself.  He was a partner in six managing  agency firms  and  the  share of  the  managing  agency  commission received  by him as such partner was being assessed  as  the income  of the family.  By a memorandum executed by the  co- parceners of the family a partial portion of the income from the managing agency was brought about. The memorandum stated:-               "We  have decided that......... in respect  of               the commission which accrues from 1st January,               1946  and received after that date each of  us               becomes absolute owner of his one-fifth  share               and  therefore  from  that  date......   these               commissions cease to be the joint property  of               our family’. This  Court held that the document effectively  divided  the income and the income could no longer be treated as that  of the  Hindu undivided family.  This case shows that  although the  karta continued to be a partner in the managing  agency firm, yet the character in which he received the income vis- a-vis  the Hindu undivided family had changed and the  Court gave  effect to the change of his position.   Previously  he was  acting  as  a karta on behalf of  the  Hindu  undivided family  in  the  managing agency firm-, later  he  became  a partner on behalf of the members of the family.  It seems to us  that when a sub-partnership is entered into the  partner changes  his  character vis-a-vis the sub-partners  and  the Income  Tax  authorities,  although other  partners  in  the original partner. ship are not affected by the changes  that may have taken place. In  our view the Calcutta High Court decision relied  on  by the  High Court and the learned counsel for  the  respondent (Mahaliram  Santhalia v. Commissioner of  Income-tax(1)  was wrongly decided.  The facts in that case were these.  Mahal’ Santhalia  was  a  partner in the  firm  M/s  Benares  Steel Rolling Nills.  He was also a partner in another firm  named M/s  Radhakissen  Santhalia.  By agreement  dated  April  3, 1944, between the partners of M/s Radhakissen Santhalia,  it was  provided that the partnership income from  M/s  Benares Steel Rolling Mills would belong not to Mahaliram  Santhalia individually  but to the firm of M/s Radhakissen  Santhalia. The High Court of Calcutta held that the agreement  amounted only to voluntary disposition by Mahaliram Santhalia of  his income and there was no diversion of income to the firm  M/s Radhakissen Santhalia before it became

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(1) [1960] 3 S.C.R. 296. (2) 33 I.T.& 261. 461 Mahaliram Santhalia’s income.  The High Court observed at p. 272:-               "If.  as  Mr. Mitra  conceded,  Mahaliram  was               rightly  taken  as a partner  of  the  Benares               Steel  Rolling Mills in personal capacity  and               if  a  one-fourth  share  of  the  income  was               rightly  allocated to him, any agreement  bet-               ween him and his three partners of the firm of               Radhakissen Santhalia, under which the  income               was  to be treated as the income of the  whole               firm,  could  only be an  agreement  by  which               Mahaliram  Santhalia  was  allowing  what  was               really his income to be treated as the  income               of  the firm or, in other words, as  agreement               by  which he was applying or  distributing  an               income which he had already himself earned and               received.   Such application ,or  distribution               would   be  a  voluntary  act   of   Mahaliram               Santhalia  in  respect of a sum which  it  was               conceded, had rightly been included in his own               total,  income  and,  therefore  was  his  own               income.  If the moment the share of the income               from  the  Benares  Steel  Rolling  Miffs  was               allocated  to Mahaliram Santhalia,  it  became               his  income and liable to be included  in  his               own  total  income  for  the  purpose  of  his               personal assessment, an agreement by him  with               other  persons  regarding the rights  to  that               income  could only be a voluntary  disposition               of  his  income  by him.   No  question  of  a               diversion  by  superior  tide  could  possibly               arise." With  respect,  we  are unable to agree with  most  of  this reasoning.   In our view, in the case of  a  sub-partnership the sub-partnership creates a superior title and diverts the income  before  it becomes the income of  the  partner.   In other  words,  the  partner in the main  firm  receives  the income not only on his behalf but on behalf of the  partners in the sub-partnership.  The Calcutta High Court also  seems to be, in our opinion, erroneously impressed by the argument that  "It  is impossible to see how, after  a  proportionate share  of  the income had thus been included  in  the  total income  of  a  partner  for the  purposes  of  his  personal assessment,  it  could  then go anywhere else  or  could  be further divided between such partners and other parties." We will  deal  with this aspect while dealing with  the  second point raised by the learned counsel for the revenue. Mr.  Hazarnavis, in this connection, drew our  attention  to the  following passage in K. A. Ramachar v. Commissioner  of Income-tax, Madras(1):-               "This,   in   our  opinion,  is   neither   in               accordance  with  the law of  partnership  nor               with the facts as we have found on the record.               Under  the  law  of  partnership,  it  is  the               partner and the partner alone who is  entitled               to               (1)42 I.T.B. 25, 29.               462               the  profits.  A stranger, even if he were  an               assignee, has and can have no direct claim  to               the  profits.  By the deeds in  question,  the               assessee merely allowed a payment to his  wife

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             and daughters to constitute a valid  discharge               in favour of the firm; but what was paid  was,               in law, a portion of his profits, or, in other               words, his income". This  passage was also relied on by the High Court.  In  our opinion,  these observations have to be read in the  context of  the  facts  found in that case.  In  that  case  it  was neither  urged  nor found that a sub-partnership  came  into existence  between the assessee who was a partner in a  firm and his wife, married daughter and minor daughter.  It was a pure  case of assignment of profits (and not losses) by  the partner during the period of eight years.  Further the  fact that a sub-partner can have no direct claim, to the  profits vis-a-vis the other partners of the firm and that it is  the partner alone who is entitled to profits vis-a-vis the other partners  does  not show that the changed character  of  the partner  should not be taken into consideration  for  income tax  purposes.  This Court held in Commissioner  of  Income- tax, Gujarat v. Abdul Rahim(1) that registration of the firm could  not  be refused on the ground that a  partner  was  a benamidar and that a benamidar is a mere trustee of the real owner  and he has no beneficial interest in the  profits  of the   business  of  the  real  owner.   Under  the  law   of partnership  it  is the benamidar who would be  entitled  to receive  the profits from the other partners but for  income tax  purposes it does not mean that it is the benamidar  who alone  can be assessed in respect of the income received  by him. In  conclusion we hold that the High Court was in  error  in holding  that  there  was  no  question  of  an   overriding ogligation  in  this case and that the income  remained  the income  of  Murlidhar  Himatsingka  in  spite  of  the  sub- partnership  created  by  him  under  the  agreement   dated December 21, 1949. The  second  contention  raised by Mr.  Hazarnavis  was  not debated  in the High Court, but in our opinion, there is  no substance  in  this contention.  We have  already  mentioned that  a  benamidar can be a partner in a firm.  Now  if  Mr. Hazarnavis’s  contention is right, under s. 25(5)(a) of  the Act  it  is only he who could be assessed, but there  is  no warrant  for this proposition.  In Commissioner  of  Income- tax,  West  Bengal  v. Kalu Babu  Lal  Chand(2)  this  Court mentioned  with approval Kaniram Hazarimull v.  Commissioner of Income-tax(1) where income from a partnership received by a  karta  was held to be assessable in the  hands  of  Hindu Undivided famlly. This Court observed at p. 12 as follows:--               "If  for  the purpose of contribution  of  his               share  of  the capital in the firm  the  karta               brought in monies out               (1) 55 I.T.R 651.    (2) 37 I.T.R. 123.               (3) 27 I.T.R. 294.               463               of  the  till of the Hindu  undivided  family,               then  he  must be regarded as  having  entered               into  the partnernship for the benefit of  the               Hindu undivided family and as between him  and               the  other members of his family he  would  be                             accountable for all profits received b y him  as               his  share out of the partnership profits  and               such profits would be assessable as income  in               the  hands  of  the  Hindu  undivided  family.               Reference may be made to the cases of  Kaniram               Hazarimull  v. Commissioner  of  Income-tax(1)

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             and Dhanwatav v. Commissioner of Income-tax(1)               in support of this view". The  object of s. 23(5)(a) is not to assess the firm  itself but  to  apportion the income among  the  various  partners. After  the  income  has been  apportioned,  the  Income  Tax Officer  has  to  find  whether it is  the  partner  who  is assessable  or whether the income should be taken to be  the real income of some other person.  If it is the real  income of  another  firm,  it is that firm which is  liable  to  be assessed under s. 23(5)(a) of the Act. This view was taken by the Bombay High Court in Ratilal  B., Daftri  v. Commissioner of Income-tax(1).  The  Bombay  High Court observed at p. 24 as follows:--                "The principle asserted in that case  is that               even   in   the  case  of  a  partner   in   a               registered firm, when     the question  arises               as to his individual assessment, what    is to               be  considered is not the income allocated  to               his  share  by  employing  the  machinery   of               section  23(5)(a),  but his real  income,  and               that   real  income  is  what  remains   after               deducting  the  amounts which may be  said  to               have  been diverted and never constituted  his               real  income and such amounts will have to  be               excluded before his real income is reached". In  conclusion we hold that there is nothing in s.  23(5)(a) that   prevents   the  income  from   the   firm   Basantlal Ghanshyamdas  being treated as the income of M/s  Fatehchand Murlidhar and s. 23(5) (a)  being applied again. In the result we accept the appeals, set aside the  judgment of the High Court and answer the questions in the  negative. The  appellants  will be entitled to costs here and  in  the High Court., One hearing fee. Appeals allowed. (1)27 I.T.R. 294. (2)  32 I.T.R. 682. (3)36 I.T.R. 18. 464