19 April 1963
Supreme Court
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KALWA DEVADATTAM AND TWO OTHERS Vs THE UNION OF INDIA AND OTHERS

Case number: Appeal (civil) 641 of 1961


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PETITIONER: KALWA DEVADATTAM AND TWO OTHERS

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THE UNION OF INDIA AND OTHERS

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 19/04/1963

BENCH: SHAH, J.C. BENCH: SHAH, J.C. SARKAR, A.K. HIDAYATULLAH, M.

CITATION:  1964 AIR  880            1964 SCR  (3) 191  CITATOR INFO :  RF         1966 SC1089  (16)  R          1966 SC1370  (31)  APL        1967 SC1541  (5)  F          1977 SC 409  (16)  RF         1978 SC1362  (34)  RF         1981 SC1562  (13)  R          1981 SC1965  (12)  R          1982 SC 760  (13)

ACT: Income-Tax--Aseessment--Civil Court  debarred   from setting aside  or  modifying  assessment--Effect  of  partition   on payment  of Income-tax--Mere  execution  or registration  of partition  deed  not decisive--Question   of  onus--Code  of Civil  Procedure, 1908 (Act V of  1908).--Indian  Income-Tax Act, 1922 (11 of 1922), ss. 25.A, 67.

HEADNOTE:     Nagappa  and his sons who formed a joint family  carried on business and they were assessed to income-tax and  super- tax  by the Income-tax authorities.  As Nagappa did not  pay the tax assessed, 51  items of immovable property  belonging to the joint family were attached and 38 items were actually sold  A  suit was filed by the sons of  Nagappa  claiming  a decree   declaring   that   the   assessment   orders   were unenforceable against the property attached and  the sale of the   property  by  the  revenue  authorities  was   without jurisdiction,  void and illegal and an order restraining the Union  of India and the authorities of the State  of  Madras from  selling  the scheduled properties  or  confirming  the sales already held.  The plaintiffs contended that the items 46 to 51 did not belong to the joint family at all as  these were acquired by them  with funds provided by their maternal grand-mother  and  the remaining items of property were  not liable  to be attached and  sold as those had been  allotted to  them on a partition of the joint family estate on  March 14,  1947,  before the order of assessment was made  by  the Income-tax authorities.     The  contention  of the  Union  of India  was  that  the plaintiffs were not entitled to question the correctness  of the  assessment  of  tax  in  a  Civil  Court  because   the

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jurisdiction  of  the  court was excluded by s.  67  of  the Indian   Income-tax Act, that the plaintiffs were  precluded from   setting  up the plea of partition  between  them  and their  father  as  their  defence  to  the  enforcement   of liability  for the payment of tax in view of the  provisions of s. 25-A (3), that the partition was sham and not intended to  be  operative and items 46 to 51 were not  the  separate estate of the plaintiff. 192 In  another  case,   the  High Court  passed   on  March  5, 1947,  a  decree  for Rs. 10.000/- against  Nagappa  and  in favour am  of Kumaji Sure Mal.  On March 14, 1947, a deed of partition was executed by which the joint  family estate  of Nagappa  and his sons was divided and separate  shares  were given  to  Nagappa  and  his  sons.   Kumaji   got   certain properties  attached in execution proceedings.  A  suit  was filed by the sons of Nagappa claiming that the debt incurred by  Nagappa  being Avyavaharika, the  plaintiffs   were  not liable to satisfy the debt and Kumaji was not. competent  to bring  to sale in execution of the decree obtained   against Nagappa   in  his individual capacity, the interest  of  the plaintiffs  in  the joint family property  after  the  joint family status was severed and the properties of the families were partitioned.       Held  that  both the suits of the  appellants must  be dismissed.  The suit against the Union of India must fail on three  independent  grounds;   The   suit   which   was   in substance one for setting aside  an  assessment was  in  law not  maintainable because of s. 67 of the  Indian  Incometax Act,  1922.  In the absence of an order under s.  25-A  (1), the assessment of the Hindu joint family was properly  made. Even if an order recording partition was made, the liability of the plaintiffs to  pay income-tax  assessed on the family could  still be enforced against them jointly and  severally under s. 25-A (2) proviso.       Under  s. 25-A of the Income-tax Act,  if at the  date when the liability to pay tax arose’ there was in  existence a joint family, the fax Will still be assessed on the  joint family  notwithstanding  its disruption after   the  crucial date.   The  machinery  for  recovery  of  the  tax  differs according  as  an order regarding partition is made  or  not made.  If the Income-tax Officer is satisfied that the joint family   property  has,  since  the close  of  the  year  of account,  been   partitioned among the  various  members  or groups  of members in definite portions, he must  record  an order  to that effect and thereupon each member or group  of members  is liable, in addition to any income-tax for  which he  is  separately  liable, for a share of the  tax  on  the income  so  assessed according to the portion of  the  joint family  property  allotted  to him.   But  even  after  this apportionment of liability for the tax assessed on the total income  of  the joint family, the members of the  family  or groups  thereof remain jointly and severally liable for  the tax  assessed on the total income received by the family  as such.  If no order is recorded under s. 25-A (1), the family shall  be deemed, for the purpose of the Income-tax Act,  to continue to remain a Hindu undivided 193 family.  Section 25-A merely sets up machinery for  avoiding difficulties encountered in levying and collecting tax Held  also, that properties items  46 to 51 belonged to  the joint  family  and were liable to be attached  and  sold  in enforcement  of  the liability for  payment  of  income-tax, because  the alleged partition between Nagappa and his  sons was  a  sham  transaction  which was  not   intended  to  be

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operative.  The question of onus probandi is  important   in the early stages of a case.  It may assume importance  where no  evidence  at all is led on the question  in  dispute  by either  side.’ In such a contingency, the party on whom  the onus  lies  to  prove a certain  fact,  must  fail.   Where, however, evidence had been led by the contesting parties  on the  question in issue, abstract considerations of onus  are out of place.  Truth or otherwise of the case must always be adjudged on    the evidence led by the parties. Schwebo   K.8.R.M.  Firm  through  partner  Govindan   alias Ramanatham  Chettiar v. Subbiah alias  Shanmugham  Chettiar, I.L.R.   1945 Mad. 138, Wallace Brothers & Co. Ltd.  v.  The Commissioner  of  Income-tax,   Bombay   City   and   Bombay Suburban District, (1948) L.R. 75 I.A. 86, Sir Sunder  Singh Majithia  v. Commissioner of Income-tax, United and  Central Provinces  (1942) L.R. 69 I.A. 119; Commissioner of  Income- tax West Punjab, North  West Frontier  and  Delhi  Provinces v.   Tribune  Trust,  Lahore:  (1947)  L.R,  74  I.A.   306, Katragadda  China Ramayya v. Chirwvella  Venkanraju,  A.I.R. 1954   Mad.  864,  Ganapatrao  Vishwanathappa   v.   Bhimrao Sahibrao,  I.L.R.  1950  Born. 414 and  S.M.  Jakati  v.S.M. Borkar, [1959] S.C.R. 1384, referred to.

JUDGMENT:     CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION:Civil Appeals Nos. 641  and 642 of 1961.     Appeals  from  the judgment and decree dated  April  11, 1957,  of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in A.S. Nos. 95  and 520 of 1952.     A.V. Viswanatha sastri, P.V. Chalapati Rau, S.N. Andley, and  Rameshwar  Nath,  for the appellants.     K.N. Rajagopal Sastri and R.N. Sashthey, for respondents Nos. 1 to 4 (in C.A. No. 641 of 1961). 194     C.   Kandiah, M.   Rajagopalan  and  K.R. Chaudhri,  for respondent No. 1 (in C.A. No. 642 of 1961).     1963. April 19.  The Judgment of the Court was delivered by-     SHAH  J.--Nagappa  son  of  Pullanna  resident   Nandyal carried  on business in yarn, drugs and  forward  contracts. He acquired in that business a considerable estate which was treated  by him as property of the joint family  of  himself and  his  sons. Nagappa and his sons were  assessed  by  the Incometax  authorities to pay income-tax and  supper-tax  in the  status  of a Hindu undivided family as set out  in  the following table :--         Year of   Year of    Date of   Income-tax and         account    assess-    order.    super-tax         ending     ment.                assessed.     -------------  --------  -------  ---------------         24-3-44   1944-45   25-2-48   Rs. 51,116-7-0         14-3-45   1945-46   25-2-48   Rs. 21,452-1-0          2-4-46   1946-47   31-3-48   Rs. 21,012-13-0 Besides  this  amount  of income-tax  and  supertax  he  was assessed  to pay penalty and excess profits tax  aggregating to Rs. 26,602/-.  The total amount of tax due for the  three years of assessment 1944-45, 1945-46 and 1946-47  aggregated to  Rs.  1,23,233/5/-.  Nagappa did not pay  the  tax.   The revenue  authorities  of  the Province  of  Madras,  at  the instance  of the Income-tax Department attached 51 items  of immovable  property  as  belonging to the  joint  family  of Nagappa and his sons and put up the same for sale under  the Madras  Revenue  Recovery Act II of 1864. Out  of  these  38

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items were sold and were purchased by certain persons. 195     Kalwa  Devadattam,  Kalwa  Devarayulu  and  Kalwa  Nandi Sankarappa    (sons    of   Nagappa)   hereinafter    called collectively  "the plaintiffs’--through their mother  acting as  their next friend commenced suit No. 52 of 1950  in  the Court  of the Subordinate Judge, Kurnool, against the  Union of  India,     the  revenue authorities   of  the  State  of Madras,   the purchasers of the properties  at the  auction, and  Nagappa,  claiming   a decree  declaring   that     the assessment  orders made by the Income-tax officer,  Kurnool, for   the   years   1944-45,  1945-46   and   1946-47   were unenforceable against 51 items of property of the plaintiffs described in the schedule and sale of their property by  the revenue  authorities  was  without  jurisdiction,  void  and illegal",  and an order restraining the Union of  India  and the  authorities  of the State of Madras  from  selling  the "scheduled  properties" or confirming the sale already  held or  that may be held after the institution of the suit.   It was  the case of the plaintiffs that items 46 to 51 did  not at any time belong to the joint family, having been acquired by  them  with funds provided by their maternal  grandmother Seshamma,  and  that  the remaining items of  property  were not  liable  to be attached and sold since  these  had  been allotted  to them on a partition of the joint family  estate before  the order of assessment was made by  the  Income-tax authorities.     The suit was resisted by the Union of India and also  by the  purchasers on diverse  grounds.  The  Union  contended, inter aria that the plaintiffs were not entitled to question the  correctness of the assessment of tax in a  Civil  Court because  the  jurisdiction of the Court in that  behalf  was excluded  by  s. 67 of the Indian Income-tax Act,  that  the plaintiffs  were in any event precluded from setting up  the plea of a partition between them and Nagappa as a defence to the enforcement of liability for payment of tax in view   of the  provisions of s. 25A  (3),  that the 196 partition    was  sham and  not  intended  to  be  operative and that items 46 to 51 were not the separate estate of  the plaintiffs  as contended by them. The purchasers  (who  were impleaded as defendants 5 to 28) contended that there was no invalidity  in  the proceedings for assessment  of  tax  and that   they having purchased those properties for  the  full amounts  for  which they were sold, sales  in  their  favour though not confirmed were binding upon the plaintiffs.     Suit  No. 52 of 1950 was tried with another  suit  being suit  No.  54 of 1949 of the same Court in which  also   the validity of the  partition  dated March 14, 1947 fell to  be determined,  between  the sons of Nagappa and  the  firm  of Kumaji  Sare  Mal who were creditors under  a  money  decree against  Nagappa.  The facts which gave  rise to  that  suit are  these: Kumaji Sare Mal filed suit No. 7 of 1944 in  the Court  of the Subordinate Judge, Anantpur,  against  Nagappa for a decree for Rs. 10,022-10-6 due’ at the foot of certain transactions in yarn.  This suit was dismissed by the  Trial Court  on  the ground that the contracts for the  supply  of yarn were wagering contracts, but in Appeal No. 174 of  1945 the High Court of Madras decreed the  suit on March 5,  1947 holding  that  the contracts giving rise  to  the  liability though  speculative were not of a wagering  Character.   The High  Court passed a decree for Rs. 10,000/- with   interest at 6 per cent from the date of suit and costs.  This  decree was  soon  followed   by   the  execution  of  the  deed  of partition,dated  March  14, 1947, between  Nagappa  and  the

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plaintiffs,   by  which  the  joint  family  estate   valued approximately  at  Rs.  1,25,000/-  was  divided  into  four shares.   To  Nagappa  was  allotted  under  that  partition property  of the value of Rs. 31,150/and he stood liable  to satisfy debts of the value of Rs. 12,236/4/9.  In  execution of  the  decree  in  suit No. 7  of  1944  Kumaji  Sare  Mal attached  some of the properties that fell to the  share  of the plaintiffs 197 under the deed of partition dated March 14, 1947. Objections to  the attachment preferred under 0.21 r. 58 Code of  Civil Procedure by the plaintiffs were dismissed by the  executing Court on July  12, 1948. The plaintiffs then filed suit  No. 54  of  1949 for a decree setting aside  the  summary  order passed  in  the execution  proceeding,  claiming   that  the debt   incurred  by   Nagappa   being   avyavaharika,    the plaintiffs were not liable to satisfy the debt, and that the firm of Kumaji Sare Mal was incompetent to bring to sale  in execution  of  the decree obtained against  Nagappa  in  his individual  capacity, the interest of the plaintiffs in  the joint  family  property after the joint family  status   was severed  and the properties of the family were  partitioned. Common evidence was recorded in the two suits.     The  Trial Judge held  that  the  properties items 1  to 45  belonged  in the  relevant years of  assessment  to  the joint family of Nagappa and his sons, and in the absence  of an order recording partition under s. 25A (1) of the  Indian Income-tax Act, the Income-tax Officer  was bound to  assess the  undivided family even  after partition on  the  footing that the family still continued to be joint. He further held that  by  virtue of s. 67 of the Indian Income-tax  Act,  no action  questioning the assessment could be  entertained  by the  Courts,  and  that there was  no  irregularity  in  the proceedings for sale.  But the Court held that on March  14, 1947  division  of property of the undivided family  was  in fact  made between Nagappa  and  the  plaintiffs: that   the partition  was  effected with the object  of  defeating  the claims   of   the   creditors   including   the   Income-tax authorities,   but  it  was  nevertheless   partition  which was   intended   to  be  overative.  The Court further  held that  items  46 to  51  were not proved by the defendants to be the joint family property of the plaintiffs and  Nagappa. In  suit No. 54 of 1949 the learned  Judge held  following 198 Schwebo  K.S.R.M.  Firm  through  Partner  Govindan,   alias Ramanathan  Chettiar  v.  Subbiah  alias Shanmugham Chettiar (1), that after a partition between the members of the joint Hindu  family the sons’ share  in the joint family  property cannot be ’ proceeded against in execution so as to  enforce the  pious obligation of the sons to satisfy their  father’s debts  under a decree passed against the father  alone.  The learned  Judge  accordingly  decreed suit  No.  54  of  1949 holding  that the only  remedy of the firm Kumaji  Sare  Mal was to proceed by a suit to enforce the pious obligation  of the plaintiffs to discharge the pre-partition debts.     The  plaintiffs appealed against the decree in suit  No. 57  of 1950 to the High Court of Madras and the Union  filed cross-objections  to the decree appealed from.  Firm  Kumaji Sure  Mal also appealed against the decree dismissing  their suit  No. 54 of 1949.  The High Court of Andhra  Pradesh  to which  the appeals stood  transferred  for   hearing   under the  States Reorganisation Act 1956 held agreeing  with  the Trial  Court  that  a suit to set aside  the  assessment  of income-tax  was  not  maintainable  against  the Union,  and that in any event in the absence of an order under s. 25A(I)

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of  the Indian Income-tax Act, recording a  partition,   the Income-tax authorities were bound to assess tax on the Hindu undivided  family  as if that status  continued.   The  High Court also held that the partition set up by the  plaintiffs was a transaction which was nominal and sham, ’and that  the evidence established that itmes 46 to 51 were purchased with the  aid  of  joint  family funds and  not  with  ,he  funds supplied by Seshamma and therefore all the properties  itmes 1  to  51 were liable to satisfy the tax  liability  of  the joint family.  The High Court also held that the firm Kumaji Safe  Mal  was entitled to recover the debt due to  them  in execution proceeding, there being no real partition (1) I. L.R. (1945) Mad, 138. 199 between  Nagappa  and the plaintiffs prior to  the  date  of attachment.   The High Court accordingly dismissed both  the suits.     We  will reserve for separate consideration  the  common question  which arose in these two appeals, namely,  whether the  partition  by  the deed dated March  14,  1947  between Nagappa and his sons the plaintiffs was a sham  transaction. Even on the footing that the partition was real and intended to be operative, suit No. 52 of 1950 filed by the plaintiffs against  the Union was bound to fail for more  reasons  than one.    For the assessment year 1943-44 the Hindu  undivided family  of Nagappa and his sons was assessed to  income-tax. In  the  years 1944-45, 1945-46 and 1946-47 the  family  was also  assessed  to  pay  income-tax,  super-tax  and  excess profits  tax, as set out hereinbefore.   Nagappa  maintained his accounts according to the Telugu year. and the last year of  account  corresponding to the  assessment  year  1946-47 ended  on  April 2, 1946.  Under the Indian Income  Tax  Act liability  to  pay income.tax arises on the accrual  of  the income,  and  not from the computation made  by  the  Taxing authorities  in  the course of  assessment  proceedings:  it arises  at a point of time not later than the close  of  the year of account. As pointed out by the Judicial Committee of the  Privy Council in Wallace Brothers and Co, Ltd.  v.  The Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay City and Bombay  Suburban District (1):               "The general nature of the charging section is               clear.  First, the charge for tax at the  rate               fixed  for the year of assessment is a  charge               in  respect  of the income  of  the  ’previous               year,’  not a charge in respect of the  income               of  the year of assessment as measured by  the               income of the previous year.   x     x      x                     Second  the rate of tax for the year  of               assessment may be fixed after the close of the               previous               (1) (1948) L.R. 75 I.A 86.               200               year  and the assessment will  necessarily  be               made  after the close of that year.   But  the               liability  to  tax  arises by  virtue  of  the               charging  section  alone, and  it  arises  not               later  than  the close of  the  previous  year                             though quantification of the amount pa yable  is               postponed." Liability  of the Hindu undivided family of Nagappa and  his sons  therefore  arose  not later than  the  close  of  each account  year  and  account period for  which  the  tax  was assessed and it is not the case of the plaintiffs that   the family  estate was partitioned before the liability  of  the

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undivided  family to pay tax arose.  There is no dispute  in the suit filed by the plaintiffs against the Union that  the business carried on by Nagappa was the business of the joint family.   It is on the footing that the business carried  on by Nagappa was of the joint family, and the income earned in the  conduct  of  the business and the  property  was  joint family  income  that  the plaintiffs have filed  this  suit. Under s. 25A of the Income-tax Act, if at the date when  the liability  to pay tax arose there was in. existence a  joint family which has subsequently disrupted, the tax will  still be assessed on the Joint family.  The machinery for recovery of the tax however. differs according as an order  recording partition is.made or not made.  If the Income-tax Officer is satisfied on a claim made by a member of the family that the joint family  property has, since the close of the. year  of account  been’  partitioned among  the  various  members  or groups  of members m definite portions, he must’  record  an order..   to  that  effect  and  thereupon   notwithstanding anything  contained in sub-s. (1) of s. 14 of the  Act  each member  .or group of members is liable in addition .to   any income-tax  for which  he. is separately liable for a  share of  the  tax  on the income so assessed  according   to  the portion.  of the .joint family property allotted to  him  or it.  But even after this apportionment of liability for  the tax 201 assessed  on  the  total income of  the  joint  family,  the members  of the family or groups thereof remain jointly  and severally  liable for the tax assessed on the  total  income received  by  the family as such.  If no order  is  recorded tinder  sub-s.  (1) of S. 25A, by virtue of sub-s.  (3)  the family  shall  be deemed, for the purposes of  the  Act,  to continue  to remain a Hindu undivided family.   Section  25A merely   sets   up  machinery  for   avoiding   difficulties encountered  in levying and collecting tax, where since  the income  was  received the property of the joint  family  has been  partitioned  in definite portions, while at  the  same time  affirming  the liability of such members or  group  of members,  jointly and severally to satisfy the total tax  in respect  of the income of the family as such.   The  section seeks  to  remove  the  bar imposed by  S.  14  (1)  against recovery  of tax from an individual member of a joint  Hindu family  in respect of any sum which he receives as a  member of   the  family,  and  to  ensure  recovery  of  tax   due, notwithstanding  partition.  The incidence of tax,  but  not the quantum is readjusted to altered conditions. The  judicial Committee of Privy Council in  Sardar  Bahadur Sir  Sunder  Singh Majithia v. Commissioner  of  Income-tax, United and Central Provinces (1), analysed the scheme of  S. 25A as follows :-               "Section  25A  is directed to  the  difficulty               which  arose  when  an  undivided  family  had               received income in the year of account but was               no longer in existence as such at the time of’               assessment.  The difficulty was the more acute               by  reason  of  the  provision-  an  important               principle  of the Act-contained in S.  14  (1)               "The  tax shall not be payable by an  assessee               in  respect of any sum which he receives as  a               member of a Hindu undivided family."               (1)   (1942) L. R, 69 I. A. 119,               202               "Section 25A deals with the difficulty in  two               ways, which are explained by the rule,  appli-               cable to families governed by the  Mitakshara,

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             that  by a mere claim of partition a  division               of interest may be effected among  coparceners               so as to disrupt the family and put an end  to               all  right of succession by survivorship.   It               is  trite  law that the filing of a  suit  for               partition  may have this effect though it  may               take  years before the shares of  the  various               parties  are determined or partition  made  by               metes   and  bounds.   Meanwhile  the   family               property will belong to the members as it does               in a Dayabhaga family--in effect as tenants in               common.   Section 25A provided that if  it  be               found  that  the  family  property  has   been               partitioned  in definite portions,  assessment               may  be  made, notwithstanding S. 14  (1),  on               each individual or group in respect of his  or               its share of the profits made by the undivided               family, while holding all the members  jointly               and severally liable for the total tax."               In the present case no order under S. 25A  (1)               was  recorded.  It is true, that  Nagappa  had               made before the Income-tax Officer on  January               19, 1948 the following statement :               "I  am  at  present living  singly.   My  sons               divided from me about ten months back.   There               is  a document to this effect.   The  document               was registered.  My sons are as follows" :               After  recounting the names of his three  sons               and  their respective ages, lie  proceeded  to               state               "The  guardian to these minor children  is  my               wife.  I divided my family properties  between               myself and my children.  The properties                203               belonged  to our joint family.   The  business               also belonged to my joint family." It may be assumed that by this statement within the  meaning of S. 25A 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  his  family and that the Income-tax Officer was bound to make an inquiry contemplated by S. 25A.  But no inquiry was in fact made and no  order was recorded by the Income-tax Officer  about  the partition  :  by  virtue  of sub-s.  (3)  the  Hindu  family originally  assessed as undivided had to be deemed  for  the purposes  of  the Act, to continue to be a  Hindu  undivided family.   If by the assessment of the family on the  footing that  it continued to remain undivided, Nagappa or his  sons were  aggrieved  their  remedy was to  take  an  appropriate appeal  under S. 30 of the Indian Income-tax Act and  not  a suit  challenging the assessment.  The method of  assessment and  the  procedure  to  be  followed  in  that  behalf  are statutory,  and any error or irregularity in the  assessment may  be  rectified in the mariner provided  by  the  statute alone, for S. 67 of the Indian Income-tax Act bars a suit in any  Civil Court to set aside or modify any assessment  made under  the Act.  The Income-tax Officer made the  assessment of  tax under the Act : granting that he committed an  error in making the assessment without holding an inquiry into the partition  alleged by Nagappa, the error could be  rectified by resort to the machinery provided under the Act and not by a  suit  in a Civil Court.  In Commissioner  of  Income-tax, West Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi.Provinces, Lahore v.  Tribune  Trust,  Lahore  (1),  the  judicial   Committee observed :

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             "  x x x x the only remedies open to the  tax-               payer,  whether  in regard to  appeal  against               assessment or to claim for refund are               (1)   (1947) I- R. 74 I. A. 306, 316,               204               to  be  found within the four corners  of  the               Act.  This view of his rights harmonises  with               the  provisions of S. 67, x x x that  no  suit               shall  be  brought in any Civil Court  to  set               aside or modify any assessment made under  the               Act.  It is the Act which prescribes both  the               remedy  and  the  manner in which  it  may  be               enforced."               The  suit filed by the plaintiffs against  the               Union must therefore fail on three independent               grounds,  each of which is sufficient to  non-               suit them.               (1)   The suit which was in substance one  for               setting  aside  an assessment was in  law  not               maintainable  because of S. 67 of  the  Indian               Income-tax Act ;               (2)   That in the absence of an order under S.               25A  (1) assessment of the Hindu joint  family               was properly made ; and               (3)   Even if an order recording partition wag               made  the liability of the plaintiffs  to  pay               income-tax assessed on the family could  still               be enforced against them jointly and severally               under S. 25A(2) proviso. The plea of irregularity in holding the sale proceedings set up  in the Trial Court was negatived by the Trial  Court  as well  as the High Court, and has not been  canvassed  before this Court. About  the title of the plaintiffs to items 46 to 51 in  the schedule  annexed  to the plaint, the High  Court  disagreed with  the Trial Court.  These properties were  purchased  in the  names of two of the three plaintiffs by the  sale  deed Ext.  A-230 dated March 15, 1944.  The consideration of  the sale deed was Rs. 23,500/-of which Rs. 5,019/-had been  paid in advance in four instalments before March 15, 1944, 205 and  the  balance of Rs. 18,481/- was paid before  the  Sub- Registrar  to  the vendors who conveyed  the  properties  to Devadattam and Devarayulu two of the three plaintiffs acting by   their  mother  Narayanamma  as  their  guardian.    The properties  having  been purchased in the names of  the  two plaintiffs  the  burden  prima facie  lay  upon  the  Taxing authorities  to establish that the sale deed was  taken  for and  on behalf of the joint family or with the aid of  joint family funds.  Evidence was led by both the sides to support their  respective versions.  The Trial Court held  that  the plaintiffs’  case that their grandmother  Seshamma  provided the  consideration  was not proved, but there  was  also  no evidence to show that the consideration was provided by  the joint family, and as the burden of proof lay upon the Union, their case must fail.  The High Court however held that  the burden which lay upon the Union to prove that the properties were  purchased  out  of the joint  family  funds  was  duly discharged.   The  question of onus  probably  is  certainly important in the early stages of a case.  It may also assume importance  where no evidence at all is led on the  question in  dispute by either side; in such a contingency the  party on  whom  the Onus lies to prove a certain fact  must  fail. Where  however  evidence  has been  led  by  the  contesting parties on the question in issue, abstract considerations of

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onus  are out of place; truth or otherwise of the case  must always be adjudged on the evidence led by the parties. But  in support of the case that Seshamma had  provided  the consideration  three  witnesses P.W. 4, P.W. 5, and  P.W.  8 were  examined.   Seshamma  had died  a  few  months  before evidence was recorded in the suit.  That evidence was  found by  the  Trial  Court  as  well as  the  High  Court  to  be discrepant  and in essential particulars so improbable  that it could not be relied upon.  P.W. 4 Narayanamma plaintiffs’ mother-deposed that the properties had been 206 purchased for the plaintiffs by her mother Seshamma with the money  given  to  Seshamma"  by  her  husband.   This  money according  to Narayanamma was given to Nagappa  and  Nagappa paid it to the vendors in the presence of the Sub-Registrar. But  this story stands wholly discredited by  her  admission that  Seshamma’s  husband  and his brothers  were  joint  in business and estate till the former’s death.  Again there is on  the  record  a statement made by  Seshamma,  before  the Income-tax authorities, wherein she had stated that when her husband died, she might have had with her about Rs.  4,000/- to Rs. 5,000/- which she gave to her daughter.  Nagappa  was questioned in regard to this statement and he suggested that the statement was obtained by coercion from Seshamma by  the Income-tax  authorities.   The story that Seshamma  Owned  a large  amount of cash, is not supported by  any  documentary evidence  and  it  is difficult to believe  that  a  trading family  would  not have invested the amount, if  it  was  in truth  devised  to  Seshamma by.  her  husband.   In  cross- examination  Narayanamma  altered her version.   She  stated that  Seshamma’s uncle had left everything to her as he  had no  children or family but he did riot execute any  document in  favour of Seshamma and that at the time of his death  he stated  orally that Seshamma should take all the  properties and  that  Seshamma  and her brother  knew  about  what  she received  from her paternal uncle.  P. W. 5  Venkatsami  who was  originally a clerk of Nagappa, said that he was  acting as a clerk in the employment of Narayanamma.  He swore  that he  had seen Seshamma giving Rs,6,000/to  Narayanamma  about four  years ago and that a month later Seshamma brought  Rs. 3,000/-  and  gave them to Narayanamma and that  about  *,en days thereafter Seshamma brought Rs. 12,000/- and gave  them to  Nagappa and Narayanamma.  He admitted that Seshamma  had no  immovable  property  other than a house  which  she  had bequeathed  to her daughter under a will.  The  witness  did not know  207 how  Seshamma got the amount.  He, however, stated  somewhat inconsistently  under cross-examination that on the date  of registration of Ext.  A-230 Seshamma had asked her  daughter ’Narayanamma to bring the money.’ On that day the key of the iron safe was with Narayanamma and that Narayanamma  brought some  cash which was counted and paid over to  the  vendors. Both the Courts found that this witness was unreliable and a bare  reading of his recorded testimony confirms that  view. Nagappa  said that Seshamma had paid the  consideration  for the  sale-deed,  but in cross-examination  he  made  diverse statements  which threw doubt upon the truth of that  story. He was interested in devising ways and means for saving  the properties  for the benefit of his sons.  It was he who  had instigated and had prosecuted the suits.  His bare statement that  the  consideration for the sale-deed was  advanced  by Seshamma  not  supported  by  any  documentary  evidence  is unreliable, especially having regard to the statement  which Seshamma  had  made before the Income-tax  authorities.   It

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must  therefore be held that the Courts below were right  in holding  that the plaintiffs have failed to  establish  that the properties conveyed by the sale-deed were purchased with the  funds supplied by Seshamma.  It is common  ground  that the  plaintiffs had no other source of income.  As  admitted by Nagappa and his clerk  Venkatsami,   Nagappa  made  large profits  in  his  business,  and Rs.  18,481/-  out  of  the consideration  payable under Ext.  A-230 were actually  paid to the vendors by Nagappa.  There were before the Court  two versions-one   by  the  plaintiffs  who  alleged  that   the consideration  for the sale-deed was supplied  by  Seshamma. That   version,  for  reasons  already  stated,  cannot   be accepted.   On the other hand there is the version that  the funds belonged to the joint family of which Nagappa was  the Manager  and  that  Nagappa  paid  the  consideration.    No documentary  evidence  in  support  of  either  version   is forthcoming : 208 even Nagappa’s accounts have not been produced.  But if  the moneys  were  actually paid by Nagappa and the  story  about Seshamma having provided the amount be disbelieved, it would be  a legitimate inference consistent with probability  that Nagappa  had for purchasing the property provided the  funds out  of the joint family earnings.  It appears  that  Kumaji Sare  Mal who are the respondents in Appeal No. 642 of  1961 had in the suit filed by them in 1942 obtained an order  for attachment  before judgment over the immovable  property  of the  joint family in the hands of Nagappa.  This  attachment before judgment was outstanding at the date of the  saledeed Ext.  A-230.  This order for attachment before judgment  was vacated  when the suit was dismissed by the Trial  Court  on August  31, 1944.  This circumstance in the context  of  the other evidence strongly supports the contention of the Union that  with a view to protect the properties from his  credi- tors  Nagappa  thought of purchasing the properties  in  the names  of his sons the plaintiffs and the consideration  was advanced  by  him.  The High Court was  therefore  right  in holding that the properties items 46 to 51 were of the joint family and liable to be attached and sold in enforcement  of the  liability for payment of income-tax.  Civil Appeal  No. 641 of 1961 must therefore fail. We  may  now  deal  with the  questions  which  fall  to  be determined  in  Civil  Appeal No. 642  of  1961-one  of  the questions being common in Appeals Nos. 641 and 642 of  1961. Suit No. 7 of 1944 was filed by the firm Kumaji Sare Mal for damages  for breach of Contract.  That suit was  decreed  by the  High  Court  on  March  5,  1947.   Within  nine   days thereafter  the deed of partition came into existence.   The plaintiffs  contended  that  the debts  due  by  Nagappa  to Kurmaji Sare Mal being immoral or avyavharika their share in the  properties  was not liable to be sold.  In  any  event, they contended,  200 the shares allotted to them under the deed of partition were not  liable to be attached and sold in execution  proceeding in  enforcement of the decree against their father  Nagappa, and  the remedy of the creditor even if the debts  were  not avyavharika  was  to  file  a  suit  to  enforce  the  pious obligation  of  the plaintiffs and not in execution  of  the decree  obtained  against  Nagappa  alone.   The   creditors contended that the deed of partition was a sham  transaction and  therefore they were entitled to proceed  in  execution. Alternatively,  it  was contended that even if the  deed  of partition  did not evidence a sham transaction, it was  open to them as holders of a decree obtained before the partition

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to  enforce  the  pious  obligation  of  the  plaintiffs  to discharge  the  debts of their father in  execution  of  the decree, and it was not necessary for them to file a separate suit.   On  the  question as to  the  proper  procedure  for enforcement of the liability of a Hindu son to discharge the debts  of his father which are not avyavharika, where  since the  passing  of the decree on the debt against  the  father there has been a partition between the father and son, there has arisen difference of opinion.  The Madras High Court  in Schwebo  K.S.R.M..Firm v. Subbiah (1), held that  the  son’s share  in  the  property  cannot  be  proceeded  against  in execution,  as the division of status brought about  by  the partition  will stand, notwithstanding the avoidance of  the partition as a fraudulent transfer.  This was reaffirmed  in a Full Bench judgment of the Madras High Court in Katragadda China Ramayya v. Chiruvella Venkunraju (2), where the  Court held:-               "  A  son under the Hindu law  is  undoubtedly               liable  for  the pre-partition  debts  of  the               father which are not immoral or illegal.  If a               decree,  however,  is  obtained  against   the               father  alone and there is a partition of  the               family  proper’ ties, in execution of  such  a               decree,  the son’s share cannot be  seized  by               the creditor as by               (1) I.L.R, (1945) Mad. 138.               (2) A.I.R. (1954) Mad. 864.               210               reason of the partition the disposing power of               the  father  possessed by him over  the  son’s               share under the pious obligation of the son to               discharge the father’s debts can no longer  be               exercised.   With  the  partition,  the  power               comes to an end.  The liability thereafter can               be enforced only in a suit.  After  partition,               the  son’s share can no longer be  treated  as               property over which the father had a disposing               power within the meaning of S. 60 Civil P.C." On  the  other  hand  the Bombay  High  Court  has  held  in Ganpatrao  Vishwnathappa v. Bhimrao Sahibrao that  a  decree obtained  against  the Hindu father may after  partition  be executed against the son’s interest by impleading the son as a  party  to the executing proceeding  against  the  father. There  is  no clear expression of opinion by this  Court  on this  question,  though in S.M. Jakati v. S.M.  Borkar  (2), this  Court  has held that the liability of a Hindu  son  to discharge the debts of his father which are not tainted with immorality or illegality is founded in the pious  obligation of  the  son which continues to exist in the life  time  and even  after the death of the father and which does not  come to  an  end  as a result of partition of  the  joint  family property: all that results from partition is that the  right of  the  father to make an alienation comes to an  end.   In that  case the property of the family was sold in  execution of  a money decree against the father and the sons  sued  to set  aside the sale in so far as is affected their  interest in  the  property and for a decree for possession  of  their share.   The  Court  held that it was not  proved  that  the liability  which was incurred by the father was  illegal  or immoral and the sale of the joint family property  including the  share  of the sons for satisfying the debts  was  valid notwithstanding  the  severance of the joint  family  status effected before the sale was held through Court.  We do  not think  it necessary to express our opinion on  the  question whether the

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(1) I.L.R. (1950) Bom. 414. (2) (1959) S.C.R. 1384,  211 remedy of the creditor is to file a separate suit to enforce the  pious obligation of a Hindu son to discharge the  debts of his father, where since the decree against the father  on a  debt  there  has been a severance  of  the  joint  family status,  or  whether he can proceed to  execute  the  decree against the son’s interest in the property, after impleading him  as  a  party to the execution proceeding,  for  we  are definitely  of  the that partition was  a  sham  transaction which was not intended to be operative. On  March  14, 1947 the deed of partition was  executed  and registered.  The object of this partition it is alleged  was to  protect  the interest of his minor  sons  against  their father  who was acting to the detriment of his sons and  was not even living with the family.  The High Court relied upon a large number of circumstances in support of its view  that the  partition was nominal.  The deed was executed within  a week after the decree was passed by the High Court in Kumaji Sare Mal’s suit.  Nagappa had acquired an extensive property which  was on acquisition treated as joint  family  property and there was nothing to show that Nagappa was  ill-disposed towards his sons or was actuated by any desire to harm their interest.  The real purpose of the partition was to save  as much  property  as  possible  and to  preserve  it  for  his children.  The deed of partition showed apparently an  equal distribution of property valued at Rs. 1,24,600/- into  four shares each of the value of Rs. 31,150/- but the  properties allotted  to the share of Nagappa were in reality not  worth that  amount.  Nagappa had also to discharge a debt for  Rs. 12,236/4/9 -for which he was rendered liable under the  deed and  that  debt could not be satisfied out of  the  property allotted  to  him.   Again immediately  after  the  deed  of partition, Nagappa settled upon his wife Narayanamma a major fraction of that share and sold away one of the houses.  The intention 212 of  Nagappa to make it appear to the  Income-tax  Department that  no useful purpose would be served by  taking  coercive steps  as the property -allotted to him and remaining  after disposal of a good part of it as indicated above was  wholly insufficient  to  meet  the demands of  the  Department,  is indeed  clear.   It  was  Nagappa  who  had  instigated  and prosecuted  the  suits.  Narayanamma was an  illiterate  and ignorant  woman, who knew nothing about  Nagappa’s  transac- tions,  and dealings.  She did not even know  what  property had fallen to the share of her sons.  Admissions made by her disclose  that  she  did  not  manage  the  property  though apparently  she was treated as the guardian of her  sons  in the partition deed.  The story that Nagappa was living  with a  mistress,  and was not looking after  the  education  and welfare of his minor sons does not appear to be supported by any  reliable evidence.  The eldest son was at the  date  of the alleged partition 14 years of age, and the youngest  was three years old, and in the absence of any serious cause for differences  between Nagappa and Narayanamma,  partition  of the estate could not have been thought of.  Witness  Singari Seshanna  D.W.I.  has  deposed that Nagappa,  his  wife  and children  were living together in the family house  even  at the  date of the suit and that Nagappa was collecting  rents from all the houses.  This statement does not appear to have been challenged in cross-examination.  P.W. 5 Venkatsami the clerk  of  Narayanamma,  who claimed  to  be  looking  after management  of  the  properties on  behalf  of  Narayanamma,

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admitted  that  he could not say which of  the  houses  were leased and to whom; he was unable’, to give any  particulars with  regard to some of the houses.  This ignorance  on  the part  of the alleged manager lends support to the  testimony of Singari Seshanna D.W. 1 that it was Nagappa who  remained in  management  of the property, and that the  family  lived together  and in fact there was no disruption of  the  joint family.   It  is true that many documents were  produced  to show that 213 the  properties were entered in the names of the sons  after the deed of partition.  It also appears that taxes were paid separately   in   respect  of  the  houses  to   the   local Municipality  and  receipts  were issued  in  the  names  of persons in whose names they stood in the municipal  records. But  these receipts do not show the names of the persons  by whom  the  amounts acknowledged in the receipts  were  paid. The High Court has believed the evidence of Singari Seshanna D.W.  I  that  it was Nagappa who  continued  to  remain  in management.   It  is  true  that  the  plaintiffs  have  led evidence of two witnesses P.W.6 and P.W. 7 who have  deposed that they had assisted in making the partition.  The deed of partition  was undoubtedly executed and was registered,  but the  mere  execution  of the deed is  not  decisive  of  the question  whether  it  was intended to  be  effective.   The circumstances  disclosed by the evidence clearly  show  that there  was no reason for arriving at a  partition.   Counsel for  the  plaintiffs  practically conceded  that  fact,  and submitted that Nagappa’s desire to defeat his creditors, and to  save the Property for his sons, was the real  cause  for bringing  the  deed of partition  into  existence.   Counsel claimed  however that Nagappa had adopted the  expedient  of affecting  a  partition  with  the  object  of  putting  the property  out  of  the  reach  of  his  creditors,  and  the genuineness of that partition should not be permitted to  be blurred  by  the unmeritorious object of Nagappa.   But  the continued  management of the property by Nagappa  since  the partition, and the interest shown by him in prosecuting  the suits  do  clearly support the inference that  the  deed  of partition was a nominal transaction which was never intended to be acted upon and was not given effect to.  If it be held that  the partition was a sham transaction  the  plaintiffs’ suit or setting aside the summary order passed in  execution proceeding  on the application filed by the  plaintiffs  for setting aside the attachment must fail, 214 The Appeal No. 642 of 1961 must therefore also fail. Both the appeals are therefore dismissed with costs.                      Appeals dismissed.