27 September 1985
Supreme Court
Download

SHRI SUNIL SIDDHARTHBHAI ETC. Vs COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, AHMEDABAD ETC.

Bench: PATHAK,R.S.
Case number: Appeal Civil 1841 of 1981


1

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 16  

PETITIONER: SHRI SUNIL SIDDHARTHBHAI ETC.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, AHMEDABAD ETC.

DATE OF JUDGMENT27/09/1985

BENCH: PATHAK, R.S. BENCH: PATHAK, R.S. BHAGWATI, P.N. (CJ) SEN, AMARENDRA NATH (J)

CITATION:  1986 AIR  368            1985 SCR  Supl. (3) 102  1985 SCC  (4) 519        1985 SCALE  (2)755

ACT:       Transfer of a capital asset - When the assessee brings the shares  of the  limited companies  into the  partnership firm as his contribution to its capital, whether there was a transfer within  the definition of section 2 (47) of capital asset within  the terms of section 45 of the Income Tax Act, 1961.      Capital gains,  scheme of  - Sections  45 and 48 of the Income Tax,  1961, scope  of - When the assessee transferred his shares  to the  partnership firm, whether he can be said to have  received a  consideration  within  the  meaning  of section 48  of the Income Tax Act, 1961 and that a profit of gain accrued to him for the purpose of section 45 ibid.

HEADNOTE:        In  Civil Appeal  No. 1841  of 1981,  the  appellant- assessee was  a partner  in Messrs  Suvas Trading Company, a partnership firm  constituted under  a deed  of  partnership dated September 27, 1973. As his contribution to the capital of the  partnership firm,  the assessee  made  over  certain shares of  limited companies  which were  held by him as his capital assets.  The book  value of  the said  shares in his account books was shown as Rs. 1,60,279 but on the date when he contributed  those shares  to  the  partnership  firm  he revalued the shares at the market value of Rs. 1,49,819, and debited the  resulting  difference  of  Rs.  10,460  to  his capital account.  Since the Income Tax Officer, when drawing up the  assessment order  for the assessment year 1974-75 in respect of  the assessee  did not  include the difference in the assessable income, the Commissioner of Income Tax, being of the  opinion that the difference between the market value of the  shares and  the cost of acquisition of the shares to the assessee is liable to tax as capital gains under section 45 of  the Income  Tax Act,  1961 exercised  his  revisional jurisdiction and reopening the assessment, remanded the case to the  Income Tax  Officer  directing  him  to  revise  the assessment after  computing the capital gains arising out of the transfer.  The  assessee  appealed  to  the  Income  Tax Appellate Tribunal,  which held  that while  the transaction did amount  to a  transfer within the meaning of sub-section (47) of

2

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 16  

103 section 2  of the Income Tax Act, 1961, it did not result in capital gains  liable to  tax.  Subsequently  the  Appellate Tribunal referred  the case to the High Court of Gujarat for its opinion on the said two issues.        In  Civil Appeal  No. 1777/1981,  the appellant was a partner  in  a  registered  partnership  firm,  M/s.  Rajka, constituted under  an agreement  dated February  24, 1973 of which the  other partner  was his  wife. The assessee had in his  possession   580  ordinary   shares  of  the  Ahmedabad Manufacturing and  Calico Printing  Co. Ltd. and 82 ordinary shares of  Karamchand Premchand Private Ltd., the total cost of purchase  being Rs.  1,81,106. On  March  22,  1973,  the assessee  introduced   the  two   share  holdings   in   the partnership firm  as his  capital contribution  ant the firm credited his  account with  the market  value of the shares, namely Rs.  475,136. In  the assessment  proceedings for the assessment year  1973-74, the  Income Tax  Officer took  the view that  the contribution by the assessee of the shares to the assets  of the partnership constituted a transfer within the meaning of sub-section (47) of D section 2 of the Income Tax Act, 1961 and that the assessee was liable to income tax on a  capital gain  of Rs.  2,94,030, being  the  difference between the market price at which the shares were entered in the books of the partnership firm and the cost of the shares to the  assessee. The  appeal before the Appellate Assistant Commissioner failed,  but in  second appeal,  the  Appellate Tribunal took  the view  that there  was no  transfer  of  a capital asset  within the  meaning of  section 45  read with sub-section (47)  of section  2 of  the Income  Tax Act  and consequently deleted  the item  from the  assessment. In the circumstances the  Tribunal did  not go  into  the  question whether the  transfer  was  without  consideration.  At  the instance of  the Commissioner  of Income Tax a reference was made to  the High Court on the correctness of the Tribunal’s views. By a common judgment dated April 30/May 1 and 4, 1981 the High  Court answered the questions referred in favour of the Revenue  ant against  the assessee. Hence the appeals by special leave of the Court,      Allowing the appeals in part, the Court ^        HELD: 1.1 When the assessee brought the shares of the limited  companies   into  the   partnership  firm   as  his contribution to its capital, there was a transfer within the meaning of  sub-section (47)  of section 2 of the Income Tax Act, 1961, of a capital asset within the terms of section 45 of the Act. 104      1.2 It is well settled that a partnership firm is not a separate legal  entity ant  that the  assets  owned  by  the partner ship are collectively owned by the partners and that when  a   partner  hands   over  a  business  asset  to  the partnership firm  as his  contribution to  its  capital,  he cannot be said to have effected a sale. [113 A-B; G-H]        Malabar  Fisheries Co. v. Commissioner of Income Tax, Kerala, (1979)  120 ITR 49; Commissioner of Income Tax, West Bengal v.  Hind Construction  Ltd. (1972)  83 ITR  211  (SC) referred to.      Commissioner of  Income Tax,  Madras v.  Janab N. Hyath Batcha Sahiv,  (1969) 72  ITR 528  (Madras); Commissioner of Income Tax  (Madras) -  I v.  Abdul Khader  Motor and  Lorry Service (1978)  112 ITR  360 (Madras);  Dr. M.C.  Kackkar v. Commissioner of Income Tax, Kanpur and Ors. (1973) 92 ITR 87 (Allahabad); Commissioner  of Income  Tax,  Kerala  v.  C.M. Khunhameed (1974) 94 ITR 179 (Kerala) approved.

3

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 16  

    1.3 But while the transaction may not amount to a sale, it can  be described  as a  transfer of some other kind. m e definition of the expression transfer in sub-section (47) of section 2  of the  Income Tax  Act, 1961 is inclusive merely and does not exhaust other kinds of transfer. [114 A-B]        1.4  In its general sense, the expression transfer of property" connotes  the passing  of rights  in the  property from one  person to  another. In  one case  there may  be  a passing of  the entire  bundle of rights from the transferor to the transferee. In another case, the transfer may consist of one of the estates only out of all the estates comprising the totality  of rights  in the  property. In  a third case, there may  be a  reduction of  the exclusive interest in the totality of  rights of  the original  owner into  a joint or shared interest with other persons. An exclusive interest in property is a larger interest than a share in that property. To the  extent to which the exclusive interest is reduced to a shared  interest it would seem that there is a transfer of interest. Therefore  when a  partner brings  in his personal asset into  the capital  of  the  partnership  firm  as  his contribution to  its capital he reduces his exclusive rights in the  asset to shared rights in it with the other partners of the  firm. While he does not lose his rights in the asset altogether what  he enjoys  now is  an abridged  right which cannot be  identified with the fulness of the right which he enjoyed in the asset 105 before it  entered the  partnership capital.  When a partner brings  in his personal asset into a partnership firm as his contribution to  its capital,  an asset which originally was subject to  the entire  ownership of  the partner  becomes w subject to  the rights of other partners in it. It is not an interest which  can  be  evaluated  immediately.  It  is  an interest  which  is  subject  to  the  operation  of  future transactions of  the partnership,  and it  may  diminish  in value depending  on accumulating liabilities and losses with a fall  in the  prosperity  of  the  partnership  firm.  The evaluation of  a partner’s  interest takes  place only  when there is  a dissolution  of the  firm or upon his retirement from it.  Upon the  dissolution of  the  firm  or  upon  the partner retiring  from the  firm,  the  partner’s  right  to realise the  interest and  receive its value arises. What is realized is  the interest  which the  partner enjoys  in the assets during  the subsistence  of the  partnership firm  by virtue of his status as a partner and in accordance with the terms of  the partnership  agreement.  It  is  because  that interest  exists   already  before   dissolution  that   the distribution of the assets on dissolution does not amount to a transfer  to the erstwhile partners. What the partner gets upon dissolution  or upon retirement is the realisation of a pre-existing right or interest. It is nothing strange in the law that  a right  or interest should exist in praesenti but its realisation  or exercise should be postponed. Therefore, what was the exclusive interest of a partner in his personal asset is, upon its introduction into the partnership firm as his share  in the  partnership capital  transformed  into  a shared interest  with the  other partners in that asset. Qua that  asset,   there  is   a  shared  interest.  During  the subsistence of  the partnership the value of the interest of each partner qua that asset cannot be isolated or carved out from the  value of the partner’s interest in the totality of the partnership  assets. And  in regard  to the  latter, the value will  be represented by his share in the net assets on the  dissolution   of  the   firm  or   upon  the  partner’s retirement. But  the position  is different  when a  partner

4

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 16  

retires or  the partnership  is dissolved.  What the partner receives then  is his  share in  the  partnership.  What  is contemplated here  is a  share of  the partner  qua the  net assets of the partnership firm. On evaluation, that share in a particular case may be realised by the receipt of only one of all  the assets.  What happens  here  is  that  a  shared interest in  all the  assets of  the firm  is replaced by an exclusive interest  in an  asset of equal value. That is why it has  been held  that there  is no  transfer.  It  is  the realisation  of   a  pre-existing  right.  The  position  is different, when a partner brings his personal asset into the partnership firm as 106 his contribution  to its capital. An individual asset is the sole subject  of consideration.  An exclusive interest in it before it  enters the  partnership is  reduced on such entry into a shared interest. [114 D-G; 116 A-F; 117 B-D]       Addanki Narayanappa &  Anr. v. Bhaskara Krishtappa and 13  Ors.   [1966]  3  SCR  400;  Malabar  Fisheries  Co.  v. Commissioner of  Income Tax,  Kerala (1979)  120 ITR 49 (SC) referred to.        Commissioner  of Income-Tax, Madras-I v. Abdul Khader Motor and  Lorry Service  (1978) 112  ITR 360  (Madras); and Commissioner of  Income Tax,  Tamil Nadu  IV, Madras  v.  H. Kannan (1984) 149 ITR 545 (Madras) partly overruled.       Commissioner of Income Tax, Madhya Pradesh, Nagpur and Bhandara v.  Dewas Cine  Corporation (1968) 68 ITR 240 (SC); Commissioner of  Income Tax, Kerala v. Nataraj Motor Service (1972) ITR  109 (Kerala) Commissioner of Income Tax, Gujarat v.  Mohanbhai   Pamabhai  (1973)   91  ITR   393   (Gujarat) distinguished.        A.  Abdul Rahim,  Travancore Confectionery  Works  v. Commissioner of  Income  Tax,  Kerala  (1977)  110  ITR  595 (Kerala); Addl. Commissioner of Income Tax, Mysore v. M.A.J. Vasanaik (1979) 116 ITR 110 (Kerala) approved.        Firm  Ram  Sahay  Mall  Rameshwar  Dayal  &  Ors.  v. Bishwanath Prasad,  AIR 1963  Patna 221;  Sudhansu Kanta  v. Manindra Nath, AIR 1965 Patna 144 explained.        2.1  When the  Assessee transferred his shares to the partnership firm  he received  no consideration  within  the meaning of  section 48  of the  Income Tax Act, 1961 nor did any profit  or gain accrue to him for the purpose of section 45 of the Income Tax Act, 1961- [118 A-B]       2.2 The consideration for the transfer of the personal assets is  the right  which arises or accrues to the partner during the  subsistence of  the partnership to get his share of the  profits from time to time and, after the dissolution of  the   partnership  or   with  his  retirement  from  the partnership, to  get  the  value  of  a  share  in  the  net partnership assets  as on  the date  of the  dissolution  or retirement  after  a  reduction  of  liabilities  ant  prior charges. The  credit entry  mate in  the  partner’s  capital account in  the books  of  the  partnership  firm  does  not represent the  true value  of the  consideration.  It  is  a notional value only, 107 intended to be taken into account at the time of determining the A  value of  the partner’s  share in the net partnership assets on  the date  of dissolution  or on his retirement, a share which  will depend upon a deduction of the liabilities and prior  charges existing  on the  date of  dissolution or retirement. It is not possible to predicate before hand what will be  the position  in  terms  of  monetary  value  of  a partner’s share  on that  date. At the time when the partner transfers his  personal asset to the partnership firm, there

5

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 16  

can be  no reckoning of the liabilities ant losses which the firm may  suffer in  the years to come. All that lies within the womb  of the  future. It  is impossible  to conceive  of evaluating the consideration acquired by the partner when he brings his  personal asset  into the  partnership firm  when neither  the  date  of  dissolution  or  retirement  can  be envisaged nor  can there by any ascertainment of liabilities and prior  charges which  may  not  have  even  arisen  yet. Therefore, the  consideration which  a partner  acquires  on making over  his personal  asset to  the partnership firm as his contribution to its capital cannot fall within the terms of section  48. And  as that provision is fundamental to the computation machinery incorporated in the scheme relating to the determination of the charge provided in section 45, such a case  must be  regarded as  falling outside  the scope  of capital gains taxation altogether. [118 E-H; 119 A-C]      Commissioner of Income Tax, Bangalore v. B.C. Srinivasa Setty (1981) 128 ITR 294 referred to.       2.3 Applying the principle that profits or gains under the Income  Tax Act  must be understood in the sense of real profits or  gains, that  is to say, on the basis of ordinary commercial principles  on which actual profits are computed, a sense  in which no commercial man would misunderstand, and having regard to the nature and quality of the consideration which the  partner may be said to acquire on introducing his personal asset into the partnership firm as his contribution to its  capital, it  cannot be  said that any income or gain arises or  accrues to  the assessee  in the  true commercial sense which a businessman would understand as real income or gain. Of  course, the partnership firm in question mu t be a genuine firm  and  not  the  result  of  a  sham  or  unreal transaction, and the transfer by the partner of his personal asset to  tee partnership  firm  must  represent  a  genuine intention to contribute to the share capital of the firm for the purpose of carrying on the partnership business. [120 A- B; 119 C-D]        Miss Dhun Dadabhoy Kapadia v. Commissioner of Income- Tax, Bombay  (1967) 63  ITR 651  (SC); Calcutta  Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-Tax, West Bengal, (1959) 37 ITR 1 SC; Commissioner of 108 Income Tax  v. Bai  Shirinbai K. Kooka, (1962) 46 ITR 86 SC; Poona Electric  Supply Co.  Ltd. v.  Commissioner of Income- Tax, Bombay  City I,  (1965) 57  ITR 521 SC; Commissioner of Income-Tax, West  Bengal II v. Birla Gwalior (P) Ltd. (1973) 89 ITR  266  SC;  Bafna  Textiles  v.  Income  Tax  Officer, Assessment-4, Circle  II, Bangalore  (1975) 98  ITR  209  SC referred to.      2.4 If the transfer of a personal asset by the assessee to a  partnership in  which he  is or  becomes a  partner is merely a  device or ruse for converting the asset into money which would  substantially remain  available for his benefit without liability  to income  tax on a capital gain, it will be open  to the  income tax  authorities to  go  behind  the transaction and  examine whether the transaction of creating the partnership is a genuine or a sham transaction and, even where  the   partnership  is  genuine,  the  transaction  of transferring the  personal asset  to  the  partnership  firm represents a real attempt to contribute to the share capital of the  partnership firm  for the purpose of carrying on the partnership business  or is  nothing but a device or ruse to convert the  personal asset into money substantially for the benefit of  the assessee while evading tax on a capital gain 121 E-G]

6

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 16  

JUDGMENT:      CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1841 of 1981.      From the Judgment and Order dated 30.4.1981, 1/4.5.1981 of the Gujarat High Court in Income Tax Reference No. 235 of 1980.                              AND                Civil Appeal No. 1777 of 1981.        From the Judgment and Order dated 30.4.1981, 4.5.1981 of the  Gujarat High Court in Income Tax Reference No. 34 of 1980.        V.S.  Desai, J.P. Shah, P.H. Parekh and Gautam Phliph for the Appellant in C.A. No. 1841 of 1981.        M.K.  Vanerjee, Additional  Solicitor  General,  S.T. Desai,  P.A.   Francis,  and  Miss  A.  Subhashini  for  the Respondent in C.A. No. 1841 of 1981.        J.P.  Shah and P.H. Parekh for the Intervener in C.A. No. u 1841 of 1981. 109        V.S.  Desai, S.P.  Mehta and  Mrs. A.K. Verma for the Appellant in C.A. No. 1777 of 1981.        S.T. Desai, and Miss A. Subhashini for the Respondent in C.A. No. 1777 of 1981.       T.A. Ramachandran, Mrs. J. Ramachandran, H.K. Kaji and S.C. Patel for the Intervener in C.A. No. 1777 of 1981.      The Judgment of the Court was delivered by        PATHAK,  J. This  and the  connected appeal, filed by certificate granted by the High Court, raise the interesting question whether  the capital  contribution by  a partner to the assets of a partnership firm at an appreciated value can be said  to give  rise to a capital gain in his hands liable to income-tax.        In  Civil Appeal  No. 1841  of 1981, the facts are as follows. The  appellant, who  is the assessee, was a partner in  Messrs.   Suvas  Trading  Company,  a  partnership  firm constituted under  a deed of partnership dated September 27, 1973. As  his contribution to the capital of the partnership firm the  assessee  made  over  certain  shares  of  limited companies which  were held by him as his capital assets. The book value of those shares in his account books was shown as Rs. 1,60,279,  but on  the date  when he  contributed  those shares to the partnership firm he revalued the shares at the market value  of Rs.  1,49,819  and  debited  the  resulting difference of Rs. 10,460 to his capital account.       The Income Tax Officer, when drawing up the assessment order for  the assessment  year 1974-75  in respect  of  the assessee, did  not include  the difference in the assessable income. The  Commissioner of  Income-Tax, however,  being of opinion that  the difference between the market value of the shares and  the cost  of acquisition  of the  shares to  the assessee should have been brought to tax as capital gains in view of  s. 45  of the  Income Tax  Act, 1961, exercised his revisional jurisdiction,  and reopening  the  assessment  he remanded the case to the Income Tax Officer directing him to revise the  assessment after  computing  the  capital  gains arising out  of the  transfer. The  assessee appealed to the Income Tax  Appellate Tribunal,  and the  Appellate Tribunal held that  while the  transaction did  amount to  a transfer within the  meaning of  sub-s.(47) of  s.2 of the Income Tax Act it  did not  result in  capital gains liable to tax. The Appellate Tribunal  allowed the  appeal and  set  aside  the order of the Income 110

7

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 16  

Tax Officer.  Subsequently the  Appellate Tribunal  referred the case to the High Court of Gujarat for its opinion on the following questions of law:           1 Whether,  on the  facts and in the circumstances           of the case, the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal was           right in  law in  holding that  no  capital  gains           resulted from  the transfer  of the shares held by           the  assessee  to  the  partnership  firm  as  his           capital contribution,  the cost  of acquisition of           the shares  to the assessee being Rs. 1,49,819 and           the market value of the shares being Rs. 1,60,279?           2. Whether,  on the facts and in the Circumstances           of the  case, the  Tribunal was  right in  law  in           holding that  there  was  a  transfer  within  the           meaning of  sub-s.(47) of  s.2 of  the Income  Tax           Act,  1961   of  the  shares  contributed  by  the           assessee as  capital to  the partnership  firm  in           which he was a partner?        In Civil Appeal No. 1777 of 1981, the appellant was a partner in  a registered partnership firm, Messrs. Rajka, or which the  other partner  was his  wife. m e partnership was constituted under  an agreement dated February 25, 1973. The partnership deed  recited that  the partnership business had commenced on  January 1,  1973, that it was a partnership at will and  further provided that the assessee would initially contribute Rs.  9,000 in  cash to  the share  capital of the firm and his wife would contribute Rs. 1,000 in cash. It was provided that  when any addition to the capital was required for the  purposes of  the partnership,  the  partners  would contribute such additional capital from time to time. It was further provided  that if  any asset  was brought  in  by  a partner as  capital contribution the account of such partner would be credited with the fair market value on the date the asset was  brought in. The assessee had in his possession 80 ordinary shares  of the  Ahmedabad Manufacturing  and Calico Printing Company  Limited which  had been  purchased at  Rs. 1,55,440. He  had-also  82  ordinary  shares  of  Karamchand Premchand Private Limited purchased at Rs. 25,666. The total cost was Rs. 1,81,106        on  March 22, 1973 the market value of a share of the Ahmedabad Manufacturing  and Calico Printing Company Limited was Rs.  442 and  that of  a share  of Karamchand  Premchand Private Limited  was Rs.  2,668. On  that day,  the assessee introduced the 111 two shareholdings  in the  partnership firm  as his  capital contribution, and  the firm  credited his  account with  the market value of the shares, namely Rs. 4,75,136.        In the assessment proceedings for the assessment year 1973-74, the  Income Tax  Officer took  the  view  that  the contribution by  the assessee  of the shares to the asset of the partnership  firm  constituted  a  transfer  within  the meaning of  sub-s.(47) of  s. 2  of the Income Tax Act, 1961 and that  the assessee was liable to income tax on a capital gain of Rs. 2,94,030 being the difference between the market price at  which the  shares were entered in the books of the partnership firm and the cost of the shares to the assessee. The   assessee   appealed   to   the   Appellate   Assistant Commissioner of Income Tax, but the appeal was dismissed. In second appeal,  however, the  Income Tax  Appellate Tribunal took the  view that there was no transfer of a capital asset within the  meaning of  s.45 read  with sub-s.(47) of s.2 of the Income Tax Act and consequently he deleted the item from the assessment. In the circumstances, the Appellate Tribunal did not  go into  the  question  whether  the  transfer  was

8

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 16  

without  consideration.   The  Commissioner  of  Income  Tax obtained a  reference to  the High  Court of  Gujarat on the following questions of law:           1. Whether,  on the facts and in the circumstances           of E the case, the Appellate Tribunal was right in           law in  holding that  the contribution in the form           of shares  of the  value of  Rs. 4,75,136  by  the           assessee in  the partnership firm of Messrs. Rajka           did not amount to a transfer within the meaning of           sub-s.(47) of s. 2 of the Act resulting in capital           gains chargeable to tax?           2. If  the reply to question No. 1 is in favour of           the Revenue,  whether the  Tribunal erred  in  not           considering  whether   the  transfer  is  with  or           without consideration? By a  common judgment  dated April  30/May 1 and 4, 1981 the High Court  answered the  questions in favour of the Revenue and against the assessee.           Section 45 of the Income Tax Act, 1961 provides:           "45. (1)  Any profits  or gains  arising from  the           transfer  of  a  capital  asset  effected  in  the           previous year shall, save as otherwise provided in           sections 53, 112           54 and  54B and  54D, be  chargeable to income-tax           under the head Capital gains , and shall be deemed           to be the income of the previous year in which the           transfer took place".           Section 48 of the Act provides:-           "48. The  income chargeable under the head Capital           gains shall be computed by deducting from the full           value of the consideration received or accruing as           a result  of the transfer of the capital asset the           following amounts, namely:-           (i) expenditure incurred wholly and exclusively in           connection with such transfer;           (ii) the  cost of  the acquisition  of the capital           asset and the cost of any improvement thereto.      Learned counsel for the assessee contends that in order to attract  tax under the head Capital gains , s. 45 must be read with  s.48 and  therefore three  cumulative  conditions must be fulfilled:-           1. There  must be  a transfer  of a capital asset,           either  under   the  general  law  or  within  the           definition in  sub-s.(47) of s.2 of the Income Tax           Act.           2. Consideration  must be  received or must accrue           as a result of the transfer, and the consideration           must be  capable of  being determined  in monetary           terms in  order that  the computation  of  capital           gains may be as required by s. 48.           3. Profits  or gains  must arise from the transfer           and must be embedded in the consideration.      It is urged that if any of the three conditions remains unfulfilled no  charge can be levied under the head "Capital gains .        In  support  of  the  submission  that  there  is  no "transfer" in  the general sense of that term when a partner brings his personal assets into-the firm as his contribution towards its capital, 113 learned counsel  points out that a partnership firm is not a separate legal  entity and  that the  assets  owned  by  the partnership are  collectively owned by the partners. We have no hesitation  in accepting  that proposition for in Malabar

9

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 16  

Fisheries Co.  v. Commissioner  of Income-Tax, Kerala (1979) 120 I.T.R. 49 SC, this Court observed:-           .......... It seems to us clear that a partnership           firm under  the Indian  Partnership Act,  1932, is           not  a   distinct  legal  entity  apart  from  the           partners constituting  it and  equally in  law the           firm as  such has  no separate right of its own in           the partnership  assets and  when one talks of the           firm’s property or firm’s assets all that is meant           is property  or assets  in which  all the partners           have a Joint or common interest.        Our  attention has  been invited  to Commissioner  of Income Tax, West Bengal v. Hind Construction Ltd., (1972) 83 I.T.R. 211.  In  that  case  the  assessee  entered  into  a partnership and  as its  share of the capital it transferred the stock  of machinery  to the partnership firm. This Court held that  when the  assessee made over its machinery to the partnership firm  there was no sale and the assessee did not derive any  income. In Commissioner of Income-Tax, Madras v. Janab N.  Hyath Batcha  Sahib, (1969) I.T.R. 528, the Madras High Court  held that when a partner introduces his property into a  partnership firm  as his contribution to its capital the transaction does not involve a sale of the property. The High Court  referred to  B. 14 of the Indian Partnership act and observed:-           When a  partnership is  formed for  the first time           and one  of the  members of the partnership brings           into the  firm assets, they become the property of           the firm,  not by  any transfer,  but by  the very           intention of  the parties evinced in the agreement           between them  to treat  such property belonging to           one or  more of  the members of the partnership as           that of the firm- The view  that when a partner hands over a business asset to the partnership  firm as  his contribution to its capital he cannot be said to have effected a sale was also taken by the Allahabad High  Court in Dr. M.C. Kackkar v. Commissioner of Income-Tax, Kanpur  and Others,  (1973) 92  I.T.R.  87,  the Kerala High  Court in  Commissioner of Income-Tax, Kerala v. C.M. Kunhammed  (1974) 94  I.T.R. 179 and by the Madras High Court in  Commissioner  of  Income-Tax,  Madras-l  v.  Abdul Khader Motor ant Lorry Service, 114 (1978) 112  I.T.R. 360.  We find  no difficulty in accepting that proposition.  But while  the transaction may not amount to a  sale, can  it be described as a transfer of some other kind? Illustrations  of other kinds of transfer are provided by sub-s.(47) of s.2 of the Income Tax Act which defines the expression transfer  in  relation  to  a  capital  asset  as including the  sale exchange  or relinquishment of the asset or  the   extinguishment  of   any  rights  therein  or  the compulsory acquisition thereof under any law. The definition is inclusive  merely, and  does not  exhaust other  kinds of transfer. Its  inclusive character  was  overlooked  by  the Madras High  Court in  Commissioner of  Income-Tax, Madras-I (supra) and  in Commissioner  of Income-Tax,  Tamil Nadu-IV, Madras v.  H. Rajan and H. Kannan, (1984) 149 I.T.R. 545. In both cases  the High  Court confined  itself to  considering whether the  transaction before it was covered by any of the express terms  used in the definition, that is to say, sale, exchange relinquishment  or extinguishment,  and taking  the view that  it did  not fall  under any  of them it held that there was no transfer.        In  its general  sense, the  expression  transfer  of property connotes the passing of rights in the property from

10

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 16  

one person to another. In one case there may be a passing of the entire  bundle of  rights from  the  transferor  to  the transferee. In another case, the transfer may consist of one of the  estates only  out of  all the estates comprising the totality of  rights in  the property. In a third case, there may be a reduction of the exclusive interest in the totality of rights  of the  original owner  into a  joint  or  shared interest  with  other  persons.  An  exclusive  interest  in property is a larger interest than a share in that property. To the  extent to which the exclusive interest is reduced to a shared  interest it would seem that there is a transfer of interest. Therefore  when a  partner brings  in his personal asset into  the capital  of  the  partnership  firm  as  his contribution to  its capital he reduces his exclusive rights in the  asset to shared rights in it with the other partners of the  firm. While he does not lose his rights in the asset altogether what  he enjoys  now is  an abridged  right which cannot be identified with the fullness of the right which he enjoyed in  the asset  before  it  entered  the  partnership capital.  In   Addanki  Narayanappa   &  Anr.   v.  Bhaskara Krishtappa and  13 Ors.  [1966] 3  S.C.R. 400.,  this  Court explained:-           ........ whatever  may be  the  character  of  the           property which  is brought in by the partners when           the partnership is formed or which may be acquired           in the 115           course of  the  business  of  the  partnership  it           becomes the  property  of  the  firm  and  what  a           partner is entitled to is his share of profits, if           any,  accruing,   to  the   partnership  from  the           realisation of this property, and upon dissolution           of  the  partnership  to  a  share  in  the  money           representing the  value of the property. No doubt,           since  a   firm  has   no  legal   existence,  the           partnership property will vest in all the partners           and in that sense every partner has an interest in           the  property   of  the  partnership.  during  the           subsistence  of   the  partnership,   however,  no           partner can  deal with any portion of the property           as his  own. Nor  can he  assign his interest in a           specific  item  of  the  partnership  property  to           anyone. His  right is  to obtain  such profits, if           any, as  fall to  his share  from time to time and           upon the dissolution of the firm to a share in the           assets of  the firm  which remain after satisfying           the  liabilities   set  out  in  cl.(a)  and  sub-           cls.(i),(ii) of cl.(b) of s. 48.       The position was elaborated later in the same judgment as follows:           The whole concept of partnership is to embark upon           a joint  venture and  for that purpose to bring in           as  capital   money  or  even  property  including           immovable property.  Once that is done whatever is           brought  in   would  cease  to  be  the  exclusive           property of the person who brought it in. It would           be the  trading asset  of the partnership in which           all the partners would have interest in proportion           to  their  share  in  the  joint  venture  of  the           business of partnership. The person who brought it           in would,  therefore, not  be  able  to  claim  or           exercise any  exclusive right  over  any  property           which he  has brought in, much less over any other           partnership property.  He would  not  be  able  to           exercise his right even to the extent of his share

11

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 16  

         in the  business of  the partnership.  As  already           stated, his  right during  the subsistence  of the           partnership is  to get  his share  of profits from           time to  time as  may be  agreed  upon  among  the           partners  and   after  the   dissolution  of   the           partnership   or    with   his   retirement   from           partnership of  the value  of his share in the net           partnership assets  as on  the date of dissolution           of retirement after a deduction of liabilities and           prior charges. 116 It is apparent, therefore, that when a partner brings in his personal asset  into a  partnership firm as his contribution to its capital, an asset which originally was subject to the entire ownership  of the  partner becomes now subject to the rights of  other partners in it. It is not an interest which can be  evaluated immediately,  it is  an interest  which is subject to  the operation  of  future  transactions  of  the partnership, and  it may  diminish  in  value  depending  on accumulating liabilities  and losses  with  a  fall  in  the prosperity of  the partnership  firm. The  evaluation  of  a partner’s  interest   takes  place  only  when  there  is  a dissolution of  the firm  or upon his retirement from it. It has some times been said, and we think erroneously, that the right of  a  partner  to  a  share  in  the  assets  of  the partnership firm arises upon dissolution of the firm or upon the partner retiring from the firm. We think it necessary to state that  what is  envisaged here  is merely  the right to realise the interest and receive its value. What is realised is the  interest which  the partner  enjoys  in  the  assets during the  subsistence of the partnership firm by virtue of his status  as a partner and in accordance with the terms of the partnership  agreement.  It  is  because  that  interest exists already before dissolution, as was held by this Court in Malabar  Fisheries Co.  (supra), that the distribution of the assets  on dissolution  does not amount to a transfer to the  erstwhile   partners.  What   the  partner   gets  upon dissolution or  upon retirement is the realisation of a pre- existing right or interest. It is nothing strange in the law that a  right or  interest should exist in praesenti but its realisation or exercise should be postponed. Therefore, what was the  exclusive interest  of a  partner in  his  personal asset is, upon its introduction into the partnership firm as his share  to the  partnership capital,  transformed into  a shared interest  with the  other partners in that asset. Qua that  asset,   there  is   a  shared  interest.  During  the subsistence of  the partnership the value of the interest of each partner qua that asset cannot be isolated or carved out from the  value of the partner’s interest in the totality of the partnership  assets. And  in regard  to the  latter, the value will  be represented by his share in the net assets on the  dissolution   of  the   firm  or   upon  the  partner’s retirement.       Learned counsel for the assessee has attempted to draw an analogy  between the  position arising  when  a  personal asset is  brought by  a partner  into a  partnership as  his contribution to  the  partnership  capital  and  that  which arises when  on dissolution  of the  firm or on retirement a share in the partnership assets 117 passes to  the erstwhile  partner. It  has been held by this Court in  Commissioner of Income-Tax, Madhya Pradesh, Nagpur and Bhandra v. Dewas Cine Corporation, (1968) 68 I.T.R. 240, Commissioner of  Income-Tax,  U.P.  v.  Bankey  Lal  Vaidya, (1971) 79  I.T.R. 594  and recently in Malabar Fisheries Co.

12

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 16  

(supra) as  well as  by the Punjab and Haryana High Court in Kay Engineering  Co. v. Commissioner of Income-Tax, Patiala, (1971) 82  I.T.R. 950  the Kerala High Court in Commissioner of Income  Tax, Kerala  v. Nataraj  Motor Service  (1972) 86 I.T.R. 109,  and the  Gujarat High  Court in Commissioner of Income-Tax Gujarat  v. Mohanbhai  Pamabhai (1973)  91 I.T.R. 393 that  when a  partner  retires  or  the  partnership  is dissolved what  the partner  receives is  his share  in  the partnership. What  is contemplated  here is  a share  of the partner qua  the net  assets of  the  partnership  firm.  On evaluation, that  share in a particular case may be realised by the  receipt of  only one of all the assets. What happens here is that a shared interest in all the assets of the firm is replaced  by an  exclusive interest  in an asset of equal value. That  is why  it has  been  held  that  there  is  no transfer. It is the realisation of a pre-existing right. The position is different, it seems to us, when a partner brings his  personal   asset  into  the  partnership  firm  as  his contribution to its capital. An individual asset is the sole subject of consideration. An exclusive interest in it before it enters  the partnership  is reduced  on such entry into a shared interest.        Our  attention has also been invited to clause (b) of sub-s.(l) of  s. 17  of the  Registration Act which requires the  registration   of  non-testamentary  instruments  which purport  or  operate  to  create  declare  assign  limit  or extinguish whether in present or in future, any right, title or interest  whether vested  or contingent,  of the value of one hundred rupees and upwards, to or in immovable property, and to  the view  taken by  the courts  in this country that when a  person brings  in even his immovable property as his contribution to  the capital of the firm no written document or registration  is required  under that  clause. That view, was expressed  in Firm  Ram Sahay  Mall Rameshwar  Dayal and Others v.  Bishwanath Prasad,  A.I.R. 1963  Patna  221.  The learned Judges  relied on  the English law that the personal assets  introduced  by  a  partner  into  the  firm  as  his contribution to its capital becomes the property of the firm by reason of the intention and agreement of the parties. The view does not spring from the consideration that there is no transfer. The  view is  that  no  document  of  transfer  is required and  that, therefore,  registration is unnecessary. The Patna  High Court reiterated that view in Sudhansu Kanta v. Manindra Nath A.I.R. 1965 Patna 144. 118      Accordingly we  hold that when the assessee brought the shares of the limited companies into the partnership firm as his contribution  to its  capital there  was a transfer of a capital asset  within the  terms of  s.45 of  the Income Tax Act. In this view of the matter we agree with the conclusion reached  by  the  Kerala  High  Court  in  A.  Abdul  Rahim, Travancore Confectionery  Works v.  Commissioner of  Income- Tax, Kerala,  (1977) 110 I.T.R. 595 the Karnataka High Court in  Addl.  Commissioner  of  Income-Tax,  Mysore  v.  M.A.J. Vasanaik, (1979)  116 I.T.R.  110 and  by the  Gujarat  High Court in the judgment under appeal.      The second question is whether the assessee can be said to have  received any  consideration as  that expression  is understood in  the scheme of capital gains under the Income- Tax Act.  In Commissioner  of Income-Tax,  Bangalore v. B.C. Srinivasa Setty,  (1981) 128 I.T.R. 294, this Court observed that the  charging section  and the  computation  provisions under each head of income constitute an integrated code, and when there  is a  case to  which the  computation provisions cannot apply  at all  it is evident that such a case was not

13

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 16  

intended to  fall within  the charging section. On the basis of that  proposition learned  counsel for  the assessee  has urged that s.45 is not attracted in the present case because to compute  the profits or gains under s.48 the value of the consideration received by the assessee or accruing to him as a result  of the  transfer of  the  capital  asset  must  be capable   of    ascertainment   in   monetary   terms.   The consideration for the transfer of the personal assets is the right which  arises or  accrues‘to the  partner  during  the subsistence of  the partnership  to get  his  share  of  the profits from  time to time and, after the dissolution of the partnership or  with his retirement from the partnership, to get the value of a share in the net partnership assets as on the date  of the dissolution or retirement after a deduction of liabilities  and prior  charges. The credit entry made in the  partner’s   capital  account   in  the   books  of  the partnership firm  does not  represent the  true value of the consideration. It  is notional  value only,  intended to  be taken into  account at  the time of determining the value of the partner’s  share in  the net  partnership assets  on the date of dissolution or on his retirement, a share which will depend upon a deduction of the liabilities and prior charges existing on the date of dissolution or retirement. It is not possible to  predicate before hand what will be the position in terms  of monetary  value of  a partner’s  share on  that date. At  the time  when the  partner transfers his personal asset to  the partnership firm, there can be no reckoning of the liabilities  and losses which the firm may suffer in the years to 119 come. All  that lies  within the  womb of  the future. It is impossible  to  conceive  of  evaluating  the  consideration acquired by  the partner  when he  brings his personal asset into  the   partnership  firm   when  neither  the  date  of dissolution or  retirement can be envisaged nor can there be any ascertainment of liabilities and prior charges which may not have  even arisen  yet. In  the  circumstances,  we  are unable to  hold  that  the  consideration  which  a  partner acquires  on   making  over   his  personal   asset  to  the partnership firm as his contribution to its capital can fall within  the   terms  of  s.48.  And  as  that  provision  is fundamental to the computation machinery incorporated in the scheme relating  to the determination of the charge provided in s.45, such a case must be regarded as falling outside the scope of capital gains taxation altogether.        The  third contention  of  learned  counsel  for  the assessee is  that no profit or gain car. be said to arise to a  partner   when  he  brings  his  personal  asset  into  a partnership firm  as his  contribution to its capital. It is urged that  the capital gains chargeable under s.45 are real capital  gains   computed  on  the  ordinary  principles  of commercial accounting  and that  the capital  gains must  be embedded in the capital asset. In Miss Dhun Dadabhoy Kapadia v. Commissioner  of Income-Tax,  Bombay, (1967)  63  I.T.R.. 651, the  appellant held  by way of investment some ordinary shares in  a limited  company. An  offer  was  made  by  the company to  her by  which she  was entitled  to apply for an equal number  of new  ordinary shares  at a  premium with an option of  either taking  the shares  or renouncing  them in favour of  others. The appellant renounced her rights to all the shares  and realised Rs. 45,262.50. When this amount was sought to  be wholly  taxed as  a capital gain the appellant claimed that on the issue of the new shares the value of her old  shares   depreciated  and  that  as  a  result  of  the depreciation she  suffered a  capital loss in the old shares

14

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 16  

which she  was entitled  to set off against the capital gain of Rs.  45,262.50. In  the alternative  she claimed that the right to  receive the  new shares  was  a  right  which  was embedded  in  her  old  shares  and  consequently  when  she realised the  sum of Rs. 45,262.50 by selling her right, the capital gain  should be  computed after  deducting from that amount  the   value  of  the  embedded  right  which  became liquidated. This  Court upheld  the claim  of the  appellant that she  was  entitled  to  deduct  from  the  sum  of  Rs. 45,262.50 the  loss suffered  by way  of depreciation in the old shares. The Court proceeded on the basis that in working out capital  gain or  loss, the  principles which  had to be applied are those which are a part of commercial practice or which an 120 ordinary  man  of  business  would  resort  to  when  making computation for  his business  purposes. It  will be noticed that this principle was applied by the Court in a case where a capital  gain was  sought to be taxed under the Income Tax Act. That  profits or gains under the Income Tax Act must be understood in the sense of real profits or gains, that is to say, on the basis of ordinary commercial principles on which actual profits  are computed, a sense in which no commercial man would misunderstand, has been regarded as a principle of general application,  and there is a catena of cases of this Court which affirms that principle. Reference may be made to Calcutta  Co.  Ltd.  v.  Commissioner  of  Income-Tax,  West Bengal, (1959) 37 I.T.R. 1, Commissioner of Income-Tax v.Bai Shirinbai K.  Kooka, (1962)  46 I.T.R.  86,  Poona  Electric Supply Co.  Ltd. v.  Commissioner of Income-Tax, Bombay City I, (1965)  57 I.T.R.  521, Commissioner  of Income-Tax, West Bengal II v. Birla Gwalior (P) Ltd. (1973) 89 I.T.R. 266 and Bafna Textiles  v. Income-Tax  officer, Assessment-4, Circle II, Bangalore, (1975) 98 I.T.R. 209.       What is the profit or gain which can be said to accrue or arise  to the  assessee when  he makes  over his personal asset to  the partnership  firm as  his contribution  to its capital? The  consideration, as  we have  observed,  is  the right of a partner during the subsistence of the partnership to get  his share of profits from time to time and after the dissolution of  the partnership  or with his retirement from the partnership to receive the value of the share in the net partnership  assets   as  on  the  date  of  dissolution  or retirement  after  a  deduction  of  liabilities  and  prior charges. When  his personal asset merges into the capital of the partnership firm a corresponding credit entry is made in the  partner’s   capital  account   in  the   books  of  the partnership firm,  but that  entry is  made merely  for  the purpose of  adjusting the  rights of  the partners  inter-se when the partnership is dissolved or the partner retires. It evidences no  debt due  by the  firm to the partner. Indeed, the capital  represented by the notional entry to the credit of the  partner’s account  may be  completely wiped  out  by losses which  may be subsequently incurred by the firm, even in the  very accounting year in which the capital account is credited. Having  regard to  the nature  and quality  of the consideration which  the partner  may be  said to acquire on introducing his  personal asset into the partnership firm as his contribution  to its  capital it cannot be said that any income or gain arises or accrues to the assessee in the true commercial sense  which a  business man  would understand as real income or gain. 121      An objection  has been taken by learned counsel for the respondent  to   this  submission  being  raised  before  us

15

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 16  

because, it  is said, the question has neither been referred to his Court nor was it ever argued at any earlier stage. We are not  impressed by the objection because we think that it constitutes one  aspect of  the questions  which  have  been referred in  these cases.  The point rests on considerations purely of  law and  is fundamental  to the  question whether capital gain  arises to an assessee upon the transfer of his shares to  the partnership firm as his capital contribution. The objection is, therefore, over-ruled.      Inasmuch as  we are  of opinion  that the consideration received by  the assessee  on the  transfer of his shares to the partnership  firm dies not fall within the contemplation of s.48 of the Income-Tax Act, and further that no profit or gain can be said to arise for the purposes of the Income-Tax Act, we hold that these cases fall outside the scope of s.45 of the Act altogether.      We have  decided these  appeals on  the assumption that the partnership  firm in  question is a genuine firm and not the result  of a  sham or  unreal transaction,  and that the transfer by  the  partner  of  his  personal  asset  to  the partnership  firm   represents  a   genuine   intention   to contribute to  the share capital of the firm for the purpose of carrying  on the partnership business. If the transfer of the personal asset by the assessee to a partnership in which he is  or becomes  a partner  is merely a device or ruse for converting the  asset into  money which  would substantially remain available-for his benefit without liability to income tax on  a capital  gain, it  will be  open to the income tax authorities to go behind the transaction and examine whether the transaction  of creating the partnership is a genuine or a sham  transaction  and,  even  where  the  partnership  is genuine the  transaction of  transferring the personal asset to  the  partnership  firm  represents  a  real  attempt  to contribute to  the share capital of the partnership firm for the purpose  of carrying  on the  partnership business or is nothing but  a device  or ruse to convert the personal asset into money  substantially for  the benefit  of the  assessee while evading  tax on a capital gain. The income Tax Officer will be  entitled to  consider all  the relevant  indicia in this regard,  whether the  partnership is formed between the assessee and  his wife and children or substantially limited to  them,   whether  the  personal  asset  is  sold  by  the partnership  firm  soon  after  it  is  transferred  by  the assessee  to   it,  whether  the  partnership  firm  has  no substantial or real business or the 122 record shows  that there was no real need of the partnership firm for  such capital  contribution from  the assessee. ALL these and  other pertinent  considerations may be taken into regard when the Income Tax Officer enters upon a scrutiny of the transaction,  for in  the task  of determining whether a transaction is a sham or illusory transaction or a device or ruse he  is entitled  to penetrate  the veil covering it and ascertain the truth.      In the  result, the  questions  which  arise  in  these appeals are answered as follows:-           1. There  was a  transfer of  the shares  when the           assessee made them over to the partnership firm as           his capital contribution.           2. When the assessee transferred his shares to the           partnership  firm  he  received  no  consideration           within the  meaning of  s.48 of the Income-Tax Act           1961 nor  did any profit or gain accrue to him for           the purpose of s.45 of the Income-Tax Act, 1961. These answers  are given  by us  subject to the reservations

16

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 16 of 16  

made by us in the preceding paragraph.      The appeals are partly allowed and there is no order as to costs. S.R.                                 Appeals partly allowed. 123