12 September 1972
Supreme Court
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C.I.T. (CENTRAL) CALCUTTA Vs DAULAT RAM RAWATMULL


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PETITIONER: C.I.T. (CENTRAL) CALCUTTA

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: DAULAT RAM RAWATMULL

DATE OF JUDGMENT12/09/1972

BENCH:

ACT: Income Tax-Tribunal-Findings of fact-By use of inadmissible, irrelevant material an issue of law arises.

HEADNOTE: The Tribunal based its decision that an amount of Rs. 5 Lacs in fixed deposit    in   the  name  of  B  represented   the concealed income of respondent firm on  following circumstances : (a)  Explanation furnished by B with regard to the source of Rs.  5,00,000  in  proceedings  relating  to  his   personal assessment  was found to be incorrect; (b) transfer  of  two amounts  of  Rs.  5 lacs each from Calcutta  to  Bombay  and thereafter  to  Jamnagar  and the  issue  of  fixed  deposit receipt  by the bank in the name of the sons of partners  of the respondent firm; and (c) the use of the two receipts  as collateral  security  for  the  overdraft  facility  of  Rs. 10,00,000  afforded to the respondent firm.  The High  Court held that the above material was not safe ’for holding  that the sum of Rs. 5,00,000 belonged to the respondent firm and that the Tribunal had taken into consideration the  material which was not relevant to the issue. Dismissing the appeal, HELD  :  No  case has been made  for  interfering  with  the judgment of the High Court. (1)  Findings  on  questions  of  fact  arrived  at  by  the Tribunal can be reviewed only on the ground that there is no evidence  to  support it or that it is  perverse.   Further, when  a conclusion has been reached on an appreciation of  a number of facts, whether that is sound or not must be deter- mined  not by considering the weight to be attached to  each single  fact  in isolation but by assessing  the  cumulative effect  of  all  the facts ’in their  [1957]  31  I.T.R.  28 referred to. Sree  Meenakshi  Mills Ltd. v. Commissioner of  Income  Tax. Madras, [1957] 31 I.T.R. 28 referred to. But,  when a court of fact acts on material partly  relevant and  partly  irrelevant, it, is impossible to  say  to  what extent the mind of the court was affected by the  irrelevant material  used  by it in arriving at its  finding.   Such  a finding  is  vitiated  because of the  use  of  inadmissible material  and thereby an issue of law arises.  Likewise,  if the court of fact bases its decision partly on  conjectures, surprises  and suspicion and partly on evidence, in  such  a situation an issue of law arises. [191F] Dhirailal Gridharilal v. Commissioner of Income Tax, Bombay, [1954]  26  I.T.R.  736, Ddwarda  (Inspector  of  Taxes)  v. Bairstow and Another, [1955] 28 I.T.R. 579 and Metha  Parikh JUDGMENT: I.T.R. 181 referred to.

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In  the present case the question for determination was  not whether  the  amount  of Rs. 5,00,000  belonged  to  B,  but whether it belonged to the respondent firm.  The fact that B has  not been to give a satisfactory  explanation  regarding the source of Rs. 5,00,000 would not be decisive even of the matter  as  to whether B was or was not the  owner  of  that amount.  From the simple fact that the explanation regarding the source of money 185 furnished by A in whose name the money is lying in  deposit, has  been  found to be false, it would be a remote  and  far fetched  conclusion  to hold that the money  beyongs  to  B. There  would be in such a case no direct nexus  between  the facts found and the conclusion drawn therefrom. The  transfer  of amount of Rs. 5,00,000  from  Calcutta  to Jamnagar for fixed deposit in the name of Band the use  soon thereafter  of the fixed deposit receipt as a  security  for overdraft,  facility to the respondent firm did not  justify the  inference that the amount belonged to  the  respondent. The  approach of the Tribunal in this respect is  manifestly erroneous  because it is a common feature of commercial  and other  transactions  that securities are  offered  by  other persons to guarantee the payment of the amount which may  be found  due  from  the  principal  debtor.   The  concept  of security  and  ownership  are different and it  would  be  a wholly  erroneous approach to hold that a thing  offered  in security by a third person to guarantee the payment of  debt due from the principal debtor belongs not to the surety  but to the principal debtor.  Further B offered security for the overdraft  facility  to  a firm of which his  father  was  a partner.  In the circumstances, the fact that B received  no consideration for offering fixed deposit receipt as security for the overdraft facility would not result in any inference against the respondent. [194C] (3)  As it was the department which claimed that the  amount of  fixed  deposit receipt belonged to the  respondent  firm even  though the receipt had been issued in the name  of  B, the  burden  lay  on  the  department  to  prove  that   the respondent was the owner of the amount. A  simple  way  of discharging the onus  and  resolving  the controversy was to trace the source and origin of the amount and find out its ultimate destination.  So far as the source is  concerned  there was no material on the record  to  show that  the  amount came from the coffers  of  the  respondent firm,  As  regards the destination of the amount  there  was nothing  to  show  that  it  went  to  the  coffers  of  the respondent.  Thus both as regards the source as well as  the destination  of the amount, the material on the record  gave no support to the claim of the department.

& CIVIL  APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos. 1133  and 1134 of 1969. Appeal  by special leave from the judgment and  order  date# April 1, 1966 of the Calcutta High Court in Income-tax Refe- rences Nos. 53 and 54 of 1961. F.   S.  Nariman, Additional Solicitor-General of India,  B. B. Ahuja  S. P. Nayar and R. N. Sachthey, for the appellant. B.   Sen, N. R. Khaitan, O. P. Khaitan and B. P. Maheshwari, for the respondent. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by KHANNA , J. This judgment would dispose of civil appeals No. 1133 and 1134 of 1969 which have been filed by special leave

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by  the Commissioner of Income Tax against the  judgment  of the  Calcutta High Court in two references under section  66 of the Indian Income Tax Act, 1922 (hereinafter referred  to as the Act) and the question which arises for  determination is whether 186 there was relevant material before the Income Tax  Appellate tribunal  to  hold  that the sum of Rs.  5,00,000  in  fixed deposit  in the name of Biswanath Gupta (Bhuwalka)  was  the concealed  income of the, respondent firm for  the  previous year  corresponding to the assessment year 1946-47.   Appeal No. 1133 relates to the sum of Rs. 4,50,000 out of the above sum  of Rs. 5,00,000, while appeal No. 1134 relates  to  the remaining sum of Rs. 50,000 out of the sum of Rs. 5,00,000. The assessee firm, who is the respondent inthese       two appeals,  is a registered firm consisting of six partners.The names. of the  partners and their shares are given below       Nandlal Bhuwalka         /3/-       Girdharilal Bhuwalka     /3/-       Shyamlal Bhuwalka        /2/-       Bajranglal Bhuwalka       /2/-       Bawatmal Nopany          /3/-      Ranieshwarlal Nopany     -/3/- The  respondent  was  carrying on business  as  dealers  and commission  agents  in  jute  and  other  commodities.    In addition   to  that  it  did  speculative   business.    The respondent also acted as procuring agent for rice and  paddy in  certain areas for the Government of Bengal and  received commission on such procurements. The    respondent       was originally assessed on March 30, 1948 for the     assessment year in question on the basis of an income of Rs.  4,71,752. On appeal, the income assessed was reduced ’to Rs. 4,28,448. On  February 19, 1955 the Income Tax Officer  issued  notice under  section 34 of the Act stating that he had  reason  to believe  that the respondent’s income assessable  to  income tax had been under-assessed.  He accordingly called upon the respondent to file return of income for the assessment  year in  question.   In response to that notice,  the  respondent filed  a  return  showing  income  in  accordance  with  the original  assessment  as  reduced  in  appeal,  namely,  Rs. 4,28,448.   The Income Tax Officer thereafter  examined  the matter  afresh and made reassessment.  It was found  by  the Income   Tax  Officer  that  the  respondent  had   obtained overdraft to the extent of Its. 10,00,000 from the,  Central Bank  of India Ltd. (hereinafter referred to as the  Central Bank),  Calcutta  upon  the security of  two  fixed  deposit receipts of Rs. 5,00,000 each in the Central Bank,  Jamnagar branch One of those fixed deposit receipts was dated  Novem- ber 8, 1944 in the name of Raghunath Prasad Agarwal, who  is the  same  person as Raghunath Prasad Nopany and is  son  of Rawatmal Nopany, partner of the respondent firm.  The  other fixes  deposit  receipt was dated November 21, 1944  in  the name 187 of Biswanath Gupta (B.  N. Gupta), who is the same person as Biswanath Bhuwalka and is son of Bajranglal, partner of  the respondent firm.  There was a third fixed deposit receipt of Rs.  5,00,000 issued by Central Bank Jamnagar branch in  the name, of S. P. Agarwal, son of Rameshwarlal, partner of  the respondent  firm,  but we are not much concerned  with  that receipt. Alhough  the present appeals relate to the fixed deposit  of Rs.  5,00,000 in the name of Biswanath, we may also set  out them facts concerning the fixed deposit receipt in the  name of  Raghunath  Prasad in so far as they  are  essential  for

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appreciating the point of controversy.  On November 2,  1944 an  amount  of  Rs. 5,00,000 in cash  was  tendered  to  the Burrabazar  Calcutta  branch of the Central Bank  for  being transferred  to Bombay head office of the Bank.  The  Bombay head  office of the Bank issued thereafter demand draft  No. 36  for the amount of’ Rs. 5,00,000 on- the Jamnagar  branch of  the  Bank.  On the basis of that demand draft,  a  fixed deposit  receipt  was issued by the Jamnagar branch  of  the Central  Bank on November 8, 1944 in the name  of  Raghunath Prasad. Jamnagar  was at that time a ,part of  the  Indian princely State of Nawanagar.  Another amount of Rs. 5,00,000 was  tendered to Central Bank Burrabazar Calcutta branch  on November  15,  1944 for being transferred to,,  Bombay  head office.   The head office of the, Bank issued  demand  draft No. 41 in favour of Biswanath (B.  N. Gupta) on its Jamnagar branch.   On  the basis of that demand draft,  the  Jamnagar branch of the Bank issued a fixed deposit receipt in  favour of  Biswanath  for Rs. 5,00,000 on November  21,  1944.   On November  24, 1944 the respondent firm opened  an  overdraft account with the Central Bank Calcutta for being operated up to a limit of Rs. 10,00,000.  Letter of guarantee and letter of  continuity were signed in that connection  by  Raghunath Prasad  and  Biswanath on December 2. 1944 at  the  Calcutta branch  of the Central Bank along with a promote  signed  by the  respondent  firm  for keeping  the  two  fixed  deposit receipts   under  lien  of the  Bank   against   overdraft facilities  granted to the respondent for an, amount of  Rs. 10,00,000.   At first it was taken to be a  clean  overdraft without  any security, but on investigation the  Income  Tax authorities  found  that  the overdraft  facility  had  been granted  to  the respondent on the basis of  the  collateral security of the two fixed deposit receipts dated November 8, 1944 and November 21, 1944 issued by Jamnagar branch of  the Bank   in   favour  of  Raghunath   Prasad   and   Biswanath respectively.   No consideration, was received by  Raghunath Prasad  and  Biswanath  for  the  accommodation  that   they extended  to the respondent for giving their  fixed  deposit receipts in security for the overdraft facility. 188 Both  Raghunath  Prasad and Biswanath  in  their  individual assessments for the assessment year 1947-48 claimed that the amount of Rs. 5,00,000 deposited by each of them in Jamnagar branch belonged to them. The Income Tax Officer held in the order of assessment dated February 20, 1958 made under section 34 read with section 23 of  the Act that the amount of Rs. 10,00,000, consisting  of the two items of Rs. 5,00,000 each in fixed deposit in  the names  of Raghunath Prasad and Biswanath, was the  concealed profit of the respondent firm.  The amount of Rs. 10,00,000, besides  several  other  amounts  with  which  we  are   not concerned. was added to the total income of the respondent. On appeal the Appellate Assistant Commissioner as per order dated  May 12, 1958 held that the respondent firm  had  been able  to explain the source of Rs. 50,000 out of  the  fixed ,deposit  of  Rs. 5,00,000 in the name  of  Biswanath.   The Appellate  Assistant  Commissioner, therefore,  reduced  the addition  in  this  respect by Rs.  50,000.   The  Appellate Assistant Commissioner, however, maintained the addition  to the total income of ’the respondent of Rs. 9,50,000, out  of the  sum  of  Rs. 10,00,000 ,on account  of  the  two  fixed deposit  receipts.  Two cross appeals were filed before  the Income  Tax  Appellate  Tribunal against the  order  of  the Appellate  Assistant Commissioner, one by the  assessee  and the  other  by the department.  In the appeal filed  by  the assessee  the Tribunal, as per order dated August 11,  1959/

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December  15,  1959,  agreed with  the  Appellate  Assistant Commissioner that the fixed deposit receipt of Rs.  5,00,000 in the name ,of Raghunath Prasad and the sum of Rs. 4,50,000 out  of  the fixed deposit of Rs. 5,00,000 in  the  name  of Biswanath in Jamnagar branch of the Central Bank represented the concealed pro-fits of the assessee firm.  In the  appeal filed  by the department, which related to the deletion  of the sum of Rs. 50,000, the Tribunal held, as per order dated July  29, 1960, that the sum of RS. 50,000 also out  of  the amount  of  Rs.  5,00,000 in fixed deposit in  the  name  of Biswanath,   represented   the  concealed  income   of   the respondent firm.  Certain questions were thereafter referred under  section 66(1) of the Act by the Tribunal to the  High Court.  The Tribunal, however, declined to refer some  other questions.  Applications were thereafter filed under section 66(2)  of  the Act in the High Court for directions  to  the Tribunal to refer certain additional questions to the  High Court.   As per order dated January 16, 1962 the High  Court directed ’the Tribunal to draw a statement of case and refer the following question (hereinafter for sake of convenience mentioned as ,question No. 1 ) to the High Court                             189               "Whether   on   the   facts   and   in    the.               circumstances of the case, there was  material               before  the Income Tax Appellate  Tribunal  to               hold that the sum of Rs 5,00,000/- standing in               the name of Raghunath Prasad Nopany and a  sum               of  Rs.  4,50,000,/-  out  of  a  sum  of  Rs.               5,00,0001-  in the name of Biswanath  Bhuwalka               representing  the  fixed  deposits  were   the               concealed income of the assessee firm for  the               relevant previous year for the assessment  for               the year 1946-47." By  another  order made on the same day, viz.,  January  16, 1962,  the High Court issued a direction to the Tribunal  to draw  a statement of case and refer the  following  question (hereinafter mentioned as question No. 2) to the High Court:               "Whether on the facts and in the circumstances               of  the  case, there was material  before  the               Income  Tax Tribunal to hold that the  sum  of               Rs. 50,000/- out of the sum of Rs.  5,00,0001-               standing  in  the  name  of  Biswanath   Gupta               (Bhuwalka) representing the fixed deposit  was               the concealed income of the assessee firm  for               the  relevant  year for  the  assessment  year               1946-47.  " In the reference relating to question No. 1 about the sum of Rs.  5,00,000  in  fixed deposit in the  name  of  Raghunath Prasad  and Rs. 4,50,000 out of Rs. 5,00,000 in the name  of Biswanath,  the  High  Court held that  there  was  material before  the  tribunal to hold that the sum of  Rs.  5,00,000 sanding  in the name of Raghunath Prasad was  the  concealed income of the respondent firm for the relevant previous year for  the  assessment year 1946-47.  The High Court  in  this connection took note of the fact that Raghunath Prasad  died in August 1945 and after his death the amount of       Rs. 5,00,000 was not paid to his heirs but was adjusted  against the overdraft of the respondent firm.  As regards the  other sum  of  Rs.  5,00,000  in fixed  deposit  in  the  name  of Biswanath,  the High Court held that there was  no  material before the Tribunal to hold that it was the concealed income of  the  respondent for the relevant previous year  for  the assessment  year 1946-47.  The answer to the later  part  of question No. I as well as to question   No. 2 was thus given in favour of the respondent firm.

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The  respondent, it may be stated, filed an appeal  in  this Court to assail the finding of the High Court ’in answer  to question No-. 1 that there was material before the  Tribunal to hold that the sum of Rs. 5,00,000 in fixed deposit in the name  of  Raghunath Prasad was the concealed income  of  the respondent for the previous year in question.  The aforesaid appeal,  No. CA 1035/67, was dismissed by this Court as  per judgment  dated January 18, 1971.  The present two  appeals, as stated earlier, relate to the finding of 190 the  High  Court  that  there was  no  material  before  the Tribunal  to  hold  that the sum of Rs.  5,00,000  in  fixed deposit in the name of Biswanath was the concealed income of the respondent for the relevant previous year. It  may also be stated that in the reference which was  made under  section 66(i) of the Act by the Tribunal to the  High Court,  the High Court as per judgment dated April 1,  1966, went into the question as to whether the income tax  officer was  justified in reopening the assessment under section  34 of the Act and whether on the facts and circumstances of the case,  cash  credits  and fixed deposits  in  question  were assessable  for  the  assessment  year  194647.  Both  these questions  were answered in favour of the  department.   The decision  of the High Court in this respect is  reported  in (1967)64 I.T.R. 593: We  have  earlier  mentioned that there was  a  third  fixed deposit  receipt of Rs 5,00,000 issued by the  Central  Bank Jamnagar  branch  in  the  name of S.  P.  Agarwal,  son  of Rameshwarlal,  partner of the respondent firm.  This  amount of  Rs.  5,00,000  had also been tendered  in  cash  in  the Burrabazar  Calcutta branch of the Central Bank  in  October 1944 with instructions to remit the name to Jamnagar branch. The fixed deposit in the name of S. P. Agarwal was used as a security for overdraft facility to Shri Hanuman Sugar  Mills Ltd.,  in the managing agency of which the partners  of  the respondent firm had controlling interest.  The Tribunal held that  the amount of Rs. 5,00,000 in fixed deposit  in  the name of S. P. Agarwal did not represent the concealed income of  the  respondent firm.  An application was filed  by  the Commissioner of Income Tax to refer the question to the High Court  as to whether in the facts and circumstances  of  the case the inference of the Tribunal that the fixed deposit of Rs. 5,00,000 in the name of S. P. Agarwal did not  represent the  concealed income of the assessee firm was justified  in law.    The   Tribunal  rejected   the   application.    The Commissioner then applied to the High Court of Calcutta  for an order calling upon the Tribunal to state a case and refer the  above  question  to  the High  Court,  The  High  Court rejected the application.  The Commissioner filed an  appeal to  this  Court against the above order of the  High  Court. The  appeal of the Commissioner was dismissed by this  Court on  March 26, 1964.  The judgment of this Court is  reported in (1964)53 I.T.R. 575. In  the appeal before us the learned  Additional Solicitor General  has taken us through the various orders which  were made  in the case and has contended that there was  relevant material  before the Tribunal to hold that. the sum  of  Rs. 5,00,000  in fixed deposit in the name of Biswanath wag  the concealed income of the                             191 respondent  firm.   The  High Court, it is  urged,  was  not justified in interfering with the finding in this respect of the  Tribunal.   As against that Mr. Sen on  behalf  of  the respondent  submits  that  there was  no  relevant  material before the Tribunal to hold that the sum in question was the

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concealed income of the respondent. the answers given by the High  Court,  according  to  the  learned  counsel,   should therefore be sustained. Before dealing with the facts of this case, we may advert to the  principles  which should govern the  decisions  of  the court  in  such like cases.  Findings on questions  of  pure fact  arrived at by the Tribunal are not to be disturbed  by the  High Court on a reference unless it appears that  there was  no  evidence before the Tribunal upon  which  they,  as reasonable  men, could come to the conclusion to which  they have come; and this is so, even though the High Court  would on the evidence have come to a conclusion entirely different from  that of the Tribunal.  In other words, such a  finding can be reviewed only on the ground that there is no evidence to  support  it  or that it is perverse.   Further,  when  a conclusion  has been reached on an appreciation of a  number of  facts, whether that is sound or not must be  determined, not by considering the weight to be attached to each  single fact in isolation, but by assessing the cumulative effect of all  the facts in their setting as a whole  [Sree  Meenakshi Mills Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income Tax, Madras(1)]. When  a court of fact acts on material partly  relevant  and partly  irrelevant, it is impossible to say to  what  extent the  mind  of  the  court was  affected  by  the  irrelevant material  used  by it in arriving at its  finding.   Such  a finding  is  vitiated  because of the  use  of  inadmissible material  and thereby an issue of law arises.  Likewise,  if the court of fact bases its decision partly on  conjectures, surmises  and suspicions and partly on evidence, in  such  a situation  an issue of law arises [see Dhirajlal  Girdharlal v.  Commissioner  of Income Tax, Bombay(1)  In the  case  of Edwards (Inspector of Taxes) v. Bairstow and Another(3), the House  of  Lords  dealt  with this  aspect  of  the  matter. Viscount Simonds, in that case observed :               "For  it is universally conceded that,  though               it  is a pure finding of fact, it may  be  set               aside  on  grounds which have been  stated  in               various   ways  but  are,  I   think,   fairly               summarised  by  saying that the  court  should               take  that  course  if  it  appears  that  the               Commissioners have acted without any  evidence               or  upon a view of the facts which  could  not               reasonably be entertained." (1)  [1957] 31 T.T.R. 28. (2) [1954] 26 I.T.R. 736. (3)  [1955] 28 I.T.R. 579. 192 Lord Radcliffee expressed himself in the. following words               "If the case contains anything ex facie  which               is   bad   law  and  which  bears   upon   the               determination,  it is obviously  erroneous  in               point   of   law.   But,  without   any   such               misconception  appearing ex facie, it  may  be               that  the facts found are such that no  person               acting  judicially and properly instructed  as               to  the  relevant law could have come  to  the               determination   under   appeal.    In    those               circumstances, too, the court must intervene." The  above  observations  were relied upon  by  Bhagwati  J. (speaking  for the majority) in the case of Mehta  Parikh  & Co. v. Commissioner of Income Tax, Bombay(1).  The following proposition was laid down in that case :               "It  follows, therefore, that facts proved  or               admitted  may  provide  evidence  to   support               further  conclusions to be deduced from  them,

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             which    conclusions   may    themselves    be               conclusions  of fact and such inferences  from               facts  proved or admitted could be matters  of               law.  The Court would be entitled to intervene               if it appears that the fact finding  authority               has acted without any evidence or upon a  view               of  the facts, which could not  reasonably  be               entertained  or the facts found are such  that               no  person  acting  judicially  and   properly               instructed  as to the relevant law would  have               come to the determination in question." Keeping  the  principles enunciated above in  view,  let  us examine  the  facts of the present case.   The  Tribunal  in arriving  at the conclusion that the amount of Rs.  5,00,000 in fixed deposit in the name of Biswanath was the  concealed income  of  the respondent firm based its  decision  on  the following circumstances               (1)   Explanation furnished by Biswanath  with               regard  to  the  source  of  Rs.  5,00,000  in               proceedings    relating   to   his    personal               assessment was found to be incorrect.               (2)   The  transfer of the two amounts of  Rs.               5,00,000  each  from Calcutta  to  Bombay  and               thereafter to Jamnagar and the issue of  fixed               deposit  receipts by the Bank in the  name  of               the  sons  of the partners of  the  respondent               firm.               (3)   The  use  of  the  above  mentioned  two               receipts   as  collateral  security  for   the               overdraft  facility of Rs. 10,00,000  afforded               to the respondent firm. (1) (1956) 30 I.T.R. 181 193 The High Court took the view that the above material was not sufficient for holding that the sum of Rs. 5,00,000 belonged to the respondent firm and that the Tribunal had taken  into consideration material which was not relevant to the  issue. We  have given the matter our consideration and are  of  the opinion that no case has been made for interfering with  the judgment of the High Court. The  explanation furnished about the source of Rs.  5,00,000 in  fixed deposit in the name of Biswanath was that  he  had kept  an amount of Rs. 4,50,000 with M/s Soorajmal  Nagarmal and Rs. 50,000 in deposit with Comilla Bank.  The amount  of Rs.    4,50,000  was  stated  to-  have  been  withdrawn   by Biswanath from M/s Soorajmal Nagarmal in January 1941, while the  other amount of Rs. 50,000 was withdrawn  from  Comilla Bank  in  March 1942.  The amount of Rs. 5,00,000  was  then transferred  by  Biswanath  to his  native  place  Ratangarh (Desh) in Rajasthan due to bombing panic in Calcutta.   When war  situation  improved, the money was taken from  Desh  to Jamnagar  for  deposit.  This explanation was  found  to  be false  in view-of the admitted position that the  amount  of Rs.  5,00,000 in fixed deposit in the name. of Biswanath  in Jamnagar  bank  had  been tendered  at  Burrabazar  Calcutta branch   of  Central  Bank  on  November. .15.  1944   and thereafter was transferred through Bombay head office’  of. the   Bank,   to   Jamnagar.   There   were   also,.   other circumstances   which  pointed  to  falsity  of  the   above explanation.    The   falsity  the  above   explanation   of Biswanath, in the opinion of the High Court. did not warrant the  conclusion  that  the  amount  of  Rs.  5,00,000  lakhs belonged to the assessee.  We can find no flaw or  infirmity in  the  above reasoning of the High  Court.   The  question which arose for determination in this case was not  whether

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the  amount  of  Rs. 5,00,000  belonged  to  Biswanath,  but whether  it belonged to the respondent firm.  The fact  that Biswanath  has  not  been  able to  give  a   satisfactory explanation  regardIng the source of Rs. 5,00,000 would  not be decisive, even of the matter as to whether Biswanath was or was not the owner of that amount. A person can still  be held  to  be  the owner of a sum of money  even  though  the explanation  furnished by him regarding the source  of  that money is found to be not correct.  From the simple fact that the  explanation regarding the source of money furnished  by A,  in- whose name the money is lying in deposit,  has  been found  to  be false, it ’would be a remote and  far  fetched conclusion to hold that the money belongs to B. There  would be  in such a case no direct nexus between the  facts  found and the conclusion drawn therefrom. We  also see no cogent ground to take a view different  from that of the High Court that the other circumstances, namely, the 4--L348SupCI/73 194 transfer  of  the amount of Rs. 5,00,000  from  Calcutta  to Jamnagar for fixed deposit in the name of Biswanath and  the use  soon  thereafter of the said fixed deposit  receipt  as security  for the overdraft facility to the respondent  firm did  not justify the inference that the amount  belonged  to the  respondent.  The material on record indicates that  the facility  of overdraft on the security of the fixed  deposit receipt in the name of Biswanath was enjoyed by the assessee firm for a little over a year.  The Tribunal in this context observed  that  "it is difficult to see how the  firm  could obtain  an  overdraft upon a fixed deposit by  B.  N.  Gupta (Biswanath)".   The,  approach  of  the  Tribunal  in   this respect, in our opinion was manifestly erroneous because  it is  a  common feature of commercial and  other  transactions that  securities are offered by other persons  to  guarantee the  payment of the amount which may be found due  from  the principal  debtor.  The. concept of security  and  ownership are different and it would be a wholly erroneous approach to hold  that a thing offered in security by a third person  to guarantee the payment of debt due from the principal  debtor belongs  not to the surety but to the principal debtor.  the Tribunal  has,  also  referred  to the  fact  that  no  con- sideration  passed  to  Biswanath  for  offering  the  fixed deposit  receipt as security for the overdraft  facility  to the respondent firm.  This circumstance, in our opinion,  is of  a  natural  character and has no  material  bearing  for determining  the ownership of the amount in  fixed  deposit. Sureties  quite  often  offer security  without  receipt  of consideration  from  the principal debtor.  So  far  as  the present  case  is concerned, we cannot be oblivious  of  the fact  that  Biswanath  offered security  for  the  overdraft facility  to a firm of which his father was a  partner.   In the  circumstances,  the, fact that  Biswanath  received  no consideration  for  offering the fixed  deposit  receipt  as security for the overdraft facility would not result in  any inference against the respondent. Although the proceedings under section 34 of the Act in  the present case were started in 1955, after the lapse of  about nine  years since the time Biswanath had offered  the  fixed deposit  receipt as security for the overdraft  facility  to the  respondent firm, no material was brought on the  record to  show that the aforesaid sum of Rs. 5,00,000 in the  name of  Biswanath went to the coffers of the respondent firm  or was adjusted towards its liability as was done in respect of the  amount of Rs. 5,00,000 which had been deposited in  the

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name  of  Raghunath  Prasad.  Had the sum  of  Rs.  5,00,000 deposited in the name of Biswanath been ultimately  utilised by the respondent firm, the income tax authorities must have brought material on record about that. The  onus to prove that the apparent is not the real  is  on the party who claims it to be so.  As it was the  department which 195 claimed that the amount of fixed deposit receipt belonged to the respondent firm even though the receipt had been  issued in  the name of Biswanath, the burden lay on the  department to  prove  that the respondent was the owner of  the  amount despite  the  fact  that  the receipt was  in  the  name  of Biswanath.   A  simple  way  of  discharging  the  onus  and resolving the controversy was to trace the source and origin of the amount and find out its ultimate destination.  So far as  the  source is concerned, there is no  material  on  the record to show that the amount came from the coffers of  the respondent  firm  or  that it  was  tendered  in  Burrabazar Calcutta branch of the Central Bank on November 15, 1944  on behalf of the respondent.  As regards the destination of the amount, it has already been mentioned that there is  nothing to  show that it went to the coffers of the respondent.   On the contrary, there is positive evidence that the amount was received  by Biswanath on January 22, 1946.  It  would  thus follow  that  both  as regards the source as  well  as  the destination of the amount. the material on the record  gives no support to the. claim of the department. Learned  Additional  Solicitor General has  urged  that  the close  proximity of time between the transfer of the  amount of Rs. 5,00,000 from Calcutta for the issue of fixed deposit receipt in the name of Biswanath at Jamnagar and the opening of overdraft account of respondent firm in Calcutta with the said  fixed  deposit receipt constituting security  for  the overdraft  account would show that the said amount  in  fact belonged to the respondent.  We find it difficult to  accede to  this  submission  because the benefit  received  by  the respondent  by the use of the said receipt as  a  collateral security  for  overdraft facility was only  of  a  temporary nature.   The receipt remained in the name of Biswanath  and it  was he who got the amount of the receipt on January  22, 1946. Reference was also made by the Additional Solicitor  General to the order of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner.  It is stated  that the said order is much more elaborate  and  the Tribunal  has  made note of this fact.  In this  respect  we find that the order of the Appellate Assistant  Commissioner is  vitiated by two factual inaccuracies.  According to  the said  order, the amount of the fixed deposit receipt in  the name  of Biswanath was received in Calcutta on November  25, 1946  and  was transferred to the credit of  the  respondent firm against the overdraft with the Bank.  This  observation was  incorrect because there is ample material on record  to show  that  the  amount of the  fixed  deposit  receipt  was received,  as  mentioned  earlier, on January  22,  1946  by Biswanath  himself.   He  also, it  would  appear,  got  the interest due on the said amount. 196 The  other factual inaccuracy which crept into the order  of the,  Appellate  Assistant Commissioner was  his  assumption that the shares of the two groups of Nopany’s and  Bhuwalkas were  equal.   It was observed by  the  Appellate  Assistant Commissioner :               "The  appellant  firm itself consists  of  two               groups of partners Nopany and Bhuwalka.   Each

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             group  had  equal  shares.   Raghunath  Prasad               belongs  to the Nopany group and Biswanath  to               the  Bhuwalka group.  The amount  offered  for               fixed  deposits therefore corresponds  to  the               profit sharing proportion of each group.  This               mass  of evidence and circumstances could  not               be  upset  merely because the  fixed  deposits               stood in two particular names." The  above  factual  assumption regarding  the  equality  of shares-  of the two groups was incorrect because it  is  the common case of the parties that the share of Bhuwalka  group was 10 annas in a rupee and that of Nopany was 6 annas in  a rupee. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner also took into  account the  fact that the office of the Central Bank in  Burrabazar Calcutta  is  in the same building in which  there  are  the business premises of the respondent firm.  This was, in  our opinion, a wholly extraneous and irrelevant circumstance for determining  the  ownership of Rs. 5,00,000 which  had  been deposited in fixed deposit in the name of Biswanath.   There should,  in  our opinion, be some direct nexus  between  the conclusion of fact arrived at by the authority concerned and the primary facts upon which that conclusion is based.   The use  of  extraneous and irrelevant material in  arriving  at that conclusion would vitiate the conclusion of fact because it  is  difficult  to  predicate  as  to  what  extent   the extraneous  and  irrelevant  material  has  influenced   the authority in Arriving at the conclusion of fact. No case, in our opinion, has been made for interfering  with the  judgment of the High Court.  The  appeals  consequently fail and are dismissed with costs.  On hearing fee. K.B.N.                            Appeals dismissed 197