21 April 1960
Supreme Court
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THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX,BOMBAY CITY, BOMBAY Vs NANDLAL GANDALAL.

Case number: Appeal (civil) 788 of 1957


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PETITIONER: THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX,BOMBAY CITY, BOMBAY

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: NANDLAL GANDALAL.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 21/04/1960

BENCH: DAS, S.K. BENCH: DAS, S.K. KAPUR, J.L. HIDAYATULLAH, M.

CITATION:  1960 AIR 1147            1960 SCR  (3) 620  CITATOR INFO :  RF         1966 SC 719  (8)  R          1970 SC1343  (16)

ACT:        Income-tax-Assessment-Hindu  undivided  family  carrying  on        business  outside British india-Partnership entered into  by        coparceners  with  strangers in British  India  financed  by        remittances  received  from  undivided  family   funds-Hindu        undivided family, if resident in taxable  territories-Indian        Income-tax Act, 1922 (XI of 1922), ss. 4A(b).

HEADNOTE: N, a coparcener of the Hindu undivided family of G, carrying on business in Kathiwar, then outside British India, entered into  a  partnership with strangers in Bombay  in  1944.   A total  sum  of  Rs. 1,,50,000 was remitted  to  N  from  the undivided family 621 funds  and utilised as capital in the partnership  business. N’s   brother  joined  the  partnership  in   Bombay.    The partnership  started  another firm in Banaras  and  a  third brother  of N joined the firm.  For the year  of  assessment 1945-46 the Income-tax Officer held that the Hindu undivided family  of  G was resident in the  taxable  territories  and included  the said sum in the income of the family under  s. 4(1)(b)(iii)  of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, as  having been  brought  into  or received in  British  India  in  the relevant  year  and made the assessment on that  basis.   On appeal by the assessee the Appellate Assistant  Commissioner affirmed   the  assessment  but  the  Income-tax   Appellate Tribunal  holding that in the year of assessment the  family was not resident in the taxable territories deleted the said sum from the assessed income.  The decision of the Appellate Tribunal  was upheld by the High Court in a reference  under s. 66(1) of the Act made at the instance of the appellant: Held (per S. K. Das and J. L. Kapur, jj.), that the  expres- sion  ’control and management’ occurring in S. 4A(b) of  the Indian Income-tax Act means de facto control and  management and the word " affairs " means the affairs of the Hindu  un- divided  family capable of being controlled and  managed  by the said family as such.

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It  is  well-settled that a Hindu  undivided  family  cannot exercise   any   controlling  power  of  management   of   a partnership  entered  into by a  coparcener  with  strangers either under the Indian Partnership Act, 1932, or under  the Hindu law.  The partnerships in the instant case could  not, therefore, constitute affairs of the Hindu undivided  family within  the  meaning of s. 4A(b) of the  Act,  although  the incomes from the said partnerships might belong to the  said family, and could not determine its residence. The  place of accrual of income of a Hindu undivided  family and  the place of its residence need not necessarily be  the same under the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922. V.V.  R.  N.  M. Subbayya  Chettiar  v.  Commissioner  of Incometax, Madras, [1950] S.C.R. 961, Kshetra Mohan Sannyasi Charan Sadhukhan v. Commissioner of Excess Profits Tax, West Bengal, [1953] 24 I.T.R. 488 and B. R. Naik v.  Commissioner of Income. tax, [1946] 14 I.T.R. 324, referred to. Per Hidayatullah, J.-Under s. 4A(b) of the Indian  Incometax Act,  what are really affairs of the Hindu undivided  family must  be decided in the light of the Hindu law, and not  the law of Partnership. It  is well settled that a coparcener of a  Hindu  undivided family cannot claim any item of property or share of his own and,  consequently,  where certain  coparceners  enter  into partnerships with strangers by investing capital from out of the  undivided  family funds, as in the  instant  case,  the income  from  the  business must  belong  to  the  undivided family.   Where  the Hindu undivided family  enters  into  a business  activity  in the taxable territories  through  its coparceners, invests money and earns income, even though the partnership which results may not be an 81 622 " affair " of the family, there is still a business activity resulting  in  the partnership and the  partnership  is  the evidence  of  that business activity.  This  activity  of  a permanent character is sufficient for purposes of income-tax law  to  constitute an ,,affair" of the  family  within  the meaning of s. 4A(b) of the Indian Income-tax Act. Approvier  v. Rama Subba Aiyan, [1866] 11 M.I.A. 75,  Katama Natchiar  v.  Rajah  of Shivaganga,  [1864]  9  M.I.A.  539, Mangalchand Mohanlal, Inre, [1952] 21 I.T.R. 164,  Murugappa Chetty  &  Sons  v. Commissioner of  Income-tax,  [1952]  21 I.T.R. 311 and Kaniram Hazarimull v. Commissioner of Income- tax, [1955] 27 I.T.R. 294, referred to. V.V.  R.  N.  M. Subbayya  Chettiar  v.  Commissioner  of Income-tax, Madras, [1950] S.C.R. 961, considered. Control  and  management, in the case of a  Hindu  undivided family, can be exercised by one or more of its  coparceners, even  though partly, and if such coparceners reside  in  the taxable territories and manage its affairs, the family  must be treated as resident in such territory.

JUDGMENT:        CIVIL APPELLATE, JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 788 of 1957.        Appeal  by special leave from the judgment and  order  dated        February  16, 1955, of the Bombay High Court  in  Income-tax        Reference No. 38/x of 1954.        C.   K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India, R.  Ganapathy        Iyer and D. Gupta, for the appellant.        R.J.  Kolah,  S. N. Andley, J. B.  Dadachanji,  Rameshwar        Nath and P. L. Vohra, for the respondent.        1960.  April 21.  The Judgment of S. K. Das and Kapur,  JJ.,

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      was delivered by S. K. Das, J. Hidayatullah, J., delivered a        separate Judgment.        S.K. DAS, J.-This is an appeal by special leave from  the        judgment  and  orders  of the High  Court  of  Bombay  dated        February 16, 1955, in a reference under section 66(1) of the        Indian  Income-tax  Act, 1922, hereinafter called  the  Act.        The reference was made in the following circumstances :        The  Hindu  undivided  family of  one  Gandalal  carried  on        business  in  cloth in Wadhwan in Kathiawar,  which  at  the        relevant  time  was  outside  British  India.   The   family        consisted of Gandalal and his four sons, (1) Girdharlal, (2)        Hansraj,  (3)  Nandlal and (4) Ramniklal.  In  1944  Nandlal        came  to Bombay and started a cloth business in  partnership        with  other persons, the partnership being known as  Amulakh        Amichand & Co.        623        Nandlal’s share in the partnership was ten annas and that of        his  three partners, who belonged to the family  of  Amulakh        Amichand,  six  annas.   It was stated that  the  family  of        Amulakh  Amichand which was a well known business family  of        Bombay,  did not supply any capital to the  partnership  and        Nandlal alone was the financing partner.  On April 13, 1944,        Nandlal  received  a  sum  of  Rs.  50,000  from  the  Hindu        undivided family of which he was a member, and a further sum        of Rs. 50,000 on April 27, 1944.  Two other sums aggregating        to  Rs. 50,000 were also received from the  Hindu  undivided        family on June 8, 1944, and June 29, 1944.  The case of  the        assessee  was that a sum of Rs. 1,00,000 was given  to  each        son by the father and the sums of money received on June  8,        1944, and June 29, 1944, were a loan by the Hindu  undivided        family to Nandlal.  Therefore, the case of the assessee  was        that  Nandlal  became  the partner of the  firm  of  Amulakh        Amichand in his individual capacity.        The case of the Department, however, was that the total  sum        of  Rs.  1,50,000  sent to Nandlal by  the  Hindu  undivided        family was utilised as capital in the cloth business of  the        partnership  known as Amulakh Amichand &  Co.  Subsequently,        Girdharlal,  another brother of Nandlal, came to Bombay  and        joined the firm.  Out of the share of ten annas of  Nandlal,        Girdharlal was given a share of five annas.  The partnership        firm  of  Ainulakh  Amichand  & Co.  then  started  a  cloth        business at Banaras, and the partners of the firm at Banaras        were  the partners of the Bombay firm of Amulakh Amichand  &        Co.  and  an  outsider from Banaras.   A  third  brother  of        Nandlal  also joined the Banaras firm, but he did not  bring        any capital.        For the assessment year 1945-46 the Income-tax Officer  held        that the Hindu undivided family of Gandalal was resident  in        the  taxable territories (namely, British India), and  hence        he  included  the sum of Rs. 1,50,000 in the income  of  the        family  under  s. 4(1) (b)(iii) of the Act  as  having  been        brought  into or received in British India in  the  relevant        year  and  made an assessment on that basis.   The  assessee        appealed  to the Appellate Assistant  Commissioner,  Bombay,        but without success.  Then, there "-as an,        624        appeal  to  the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal,  Bombay.  Two        questions were raised before the Tribunal:        " (1) Whether Nandlal represented the Hindu undivided family        of  Gandalal  of  Wadhwan now in  Saurashtra,  in  the  firm        Amulakh  Amichand & Co., Bombay, and later on in  the  firms        Amulakh Amichand & Co., Bombay and Banaras.        (2)Whether  the  Hindu undivided family  of  Gandalal  was        resident in the taxable territories in the relevant years of        account."

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      The  Tribunal  held on the first question that  Nandlal  and        later Girdharlal joined the Bombay firm and also the Banaras        firm  of  Amulakh Amichand & Co. as representing  the  Hindu        undivided family of Gandalal and the money for starting  the        Bombay  business  came  from  the  Hindu  undivided  family.        Accordingly,  the  Tribunal held that Nandlal  was  properly        assessed in the status of a Hindu undivided family.  On  the        second question the Tribunal held in favour of the  assessee        and came to the following conclusion:        "  The  business  at Bombay and later  on  the  business  at        Banaras  cannot,  in our opinion, be considered  to  be  the        affairs  of the Hindu undivided family of  Gandalal.   These        two  businesses belonged to two separate  entities,  namely,        the  Bombay firm of Amulakh Amichand & Co., and the  Banaras        firm  of  Amulakh Amichand & Co. True, the  Hindu  undivided        family would in due course of time receive a share of profit        from these two firms, but all the same we do not think  that        it  could  be  said that the firms  of  Bombay  and  Banaras        constituted the affairs of the Hindu undivided family.   The        businesses   in  Bombay  and  Banaras,  according   to   the        Partnership  Act, belonged to Nandlal and others.   We  are,        therefore, of opinion that for assessment years 1945-46  ...        the  Hindu undivided family was not resident in the  taxable        territories."        The  actual relief which the Tribunal gave to  the  assessee        was expressed in the following words:        "  For  the assessment year 1945-46, the  assessee’s  status        would be Hindu undivided family but non-resident.  In so far        as the assessed income is concerned the sum of Rs.  1,50,000        which  was  included under section 4(1)(b)(iii)  has  to  be        deleted.  The rest of the        625        income accrued to the Hindu undivided family in the  taxable        territories."        At the instance of the Commissioner of Income- tax,  Bombay,        who  is the appellant before us, the Tribunal stated a  case        and referred the following question of law to the High Court        of  Bombay for its decision under s. 66(1) of the Act.   The        question was in these terms :        "Whether the Hindu undivided family of Gandalal  represented        by  Nandlal in the firm of Amulakh Amichand & Co. of  Bombay        was  resident  in  the taxable territories in  the  year  of        account relevant for the assessment year 1945-46."        The  answer to the question depended on the true  scope  and        effect of s. 4A(b) of the Act.  The High Court held that the        expression " the affairs of the Hindu undivided family "  in        s.  4A(b) did not have reference to the private or  domestic        affairs  of  the family, but referred to  affairs  concerned        with income and taxation thereon.  It said:        " We might put the matter in this way that when a coparcener        carries  on business in partnership on behalf of  the  Hindu        undivided family, the affair is of the coparcener and not of        the  family,  but  when the business is carried  on  by  the        family itself then it is the affair of the family and not of        the coparceners."        "The result is that we must agree with the view taken by the        Tribunal and we must answer the question submitted to us  in        the negative."        After the decision of the High Court the appellant  obtained        special  leave  and has come to us in pursuance  of  special        leave granted by this Court.        We  must  make it clear at the very outset  that  the  first        question  raised  before  the Tribunal  and  decided  by  it        against  the assessee does not now fall  for  consideration.        Whatever income Nandlal and Girdharlal received from the two

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      businesses  at Bombay and Banaras was income in their  hands        of the Hindu undivided family.  With that income we are  not        now  concerned.  We are concerned with the second  question,        namely,  whether the Hindu undivided family of Gandalal  was        resident in the taxable territories in the        626        relevant year so as to make the sum of Rs. 1,50,000  taxable        under  s.  4 (1) (b) (iii) of the Act on the basis  of  such        residence.  Clearly enough, if the Hindu undivided family of        Gandalal was not resident in the taxable territories in  the        relevant year, the sum of Rs. 1,50,000 would not be  taxable        under  s. 4 (1) (b) (iii) of the Act.  We  must,  therefore,        keep  in  mind the narrow scope of the question  before  us,        which  is  whether the Hindu undivided  family  of  Gandalal        could be said to be resident in the taxable territories  (i.        e., British India) in the relevant year under the provisions        of  s. 4A(b) of the Act, even though the family  carried  on        its   own   cloth  business  wholly  outside   the   taxable        territories.        It  is necessary as well as convenient to read s.  4A(b)  at        this stage :        "4A. For the purposes of this Act-        (b)a Hindu undivided family, firm or other association  of        persons  is resident in the taxable territories  unless  the        control  and  management of its affairs is  situated  wholly        without the taxable territories."        In  V.  V.  R. N. M. Subbayya Chettiar  v.  Commissioner  of        Income-tax,  Madras(1)  this Court held that  the  test  for        deciding the residence of a Hindu undivided family laid down        in  s. 4A (b) of the Act was based very largely on the  rule        which had been applied in England to cases of  corporations,        and though normally a Hindu undivided family would be  taken        to be resident in British India, such presumption would  not        apply if the case could be brought under the second part  of        the provision.  It was also observed therein that the word "        affairs  "  must  mean affairs which are  relevant  for  the        purpose  of the Income-tax Act and which have some  relation        to  income ; it was stated that in order to bring  the  case        under  the exception, the court has to ask whether the  seat        of the direction and control of the affairs of the family is        inside  or  outside British India, and the word "  wholly  "        suggests  that a Hindu undivided family may have  more  than        one  "residence" in the same way as a corporation may  have.        The position in Hindu law with regard to a coparcener,  even        when he is the Karta, entering into partnership        (1) [1950] S.C.R. 961.        627        with  others  in  carrying on a  business  is  equally  well        settled.   The partnership that is created is a  contractual        partnership and will be governed by the pro . visions of the        Indian  Partnership  Act,  1932.   The  partnership  is  not        between  the  family  and  the  other  partners;  it  is   a        partnership  between  the coparcener  individually  and  his        other partners (see Kshetra Mohan Sannyasi Charan  Sadhukhan        v.  Commissioner  of Excess Profits Tax, West  Bengal)  (1).        The coparcener is undoubtedly accountable to the family  for        the income received, but the partnership is exclusively  one        between  the contracting members, including  the  individual        coparceners  and the strangers to the family.  On the  death        of the coparcener the surviving members of the family cannot        claim  to continue as partners with strangers nor  can  they        institute  a suit for dissolution of partnership ;  nor  can        the stranger partners sue the surviving members as  partners        for  the coparcener’s share of the loss.  Therefore, so  far        as the partnership is concerned, both under Partnership  law

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      and  under Hindu law, the control and management is  in  the        hands  of the individual coparcener who is the  partner  and        not in the family.        Now, it is undisputed that but for -the partnership business        at Bombay or Banaras the Hindu undivided family of  Gandalal        was not resident in the taxable territories in the  relevant        year.   The  point  for decision,  therefore,  is  does  the        existence of the said partnership establish the residence of        the family ?        This  raises two questions before us: firstly,  whether  the        firm of Amulakh Amichand & Co. is one of the affairs of  the        Hindu undivided family of Gandalal because that is the  only        affair  which has relation to the income sought to be  taxed        and  on  which  the appellant  relies  for  determining  the        residence  of  the family; secondly, where the  control  and        management  of the said affair, looked at from the point  of        view  of the Hindu undivided family, is situate.   We  think        that  in the context of the facts found in the  case,  these        two questions are interlinked.  The expression " control and        management  "  under  s.  4A(b)  signifies  controlling  and        directive power, "the head and brain"        628        as  it is sometimes called.  Furthermore, it is settled,  we        think, that the expression control and management " means de        facto  control  and management and not merely the  right  or        power to control and manage (see B. R. Naik v.  Commissioner        of Income-tax (1)).  It is also -quite clear, we think, that        if  a coparcener becomes a partner (on behalf of  the  joint        family)  with strangers in a firm which carries on  business        in  the  taxable  territories,  that  by  itself  will   not        determine the residence of the family unless the control and        management  of the firm is at least, in part, in  the  Hindu        undivided  family.   On the facts of this  case,  the  Hindu        undivided  family  or  for that matter, the  Karta  of  that        family,  that  is  Gandalal,  could  exercise  no  power  of        controlling  management  over the partnership  firm,  either        under  Partnership law or under Hindu law.  It seems  to  us        that the word " affairs " in s. 4A(b) must mean affairs of a        Hindu undivided family which are capable of being controlled        and  managed  by the said Hindu undivided  family  as  such.        Where  a coparcener enters into partnership with  strangers,        the  Hindu undivided family exercises no controlling  -power        of  management over the partnership firm.  In that  view  of        the  matter the partnership firm cannot be an " affair "  of        the  Hindu undivided family capable of being controlled  and        managed  by the Hindu undivided family as such.  It  may  be        here  observed that the decision in V. V. R. N. M.  Subbayya        Chettiar v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras (2) proceeded        on  the  basis of onus only and as was  specifically  stated        therein, it was confined to the year of assessment to  which        the  case related and it was left open to the  appellant  of        that  case to show in future years by proper  evidence  that        the  seat  of control and management of the affairs  of  the        family was wholly outside British India.  In the case before        us the Tribunal no doubt found on the first question  raised        before it that Nandlal and Girdharlal joined the Bombay  and        Banaras  firms as coparceners of the Hindu undivided  family        and the money for starting the business came from the  Hindu        undivided  family.  That finding by itself however does  not        determine the residence of the        (1) [1946]4 1.T.R. 324.        (2) [1950] S.C.R. 961.        629        Hindu  undivided family of Gandalal.  Both under  Hindu  law        and Partnership law the Hindu undivided family as such could

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      exercise  no control and management over the two  businesses        at  Bombay  and Banaras.  These businesses belonged  to  the        partners  and on the facts found in this case, it cannot  be        said  that  the  businesses were the affairs  of  the  Hindu        undivided family of Gandalal within the meaning of s.  4A(b)        of the Act.  We agree with the High Court that the  position        would  be  different if the Hindu  undivided  family  itself        carried  on the business as its own business.  In that  case        the  business would be an affair of the family, because  the        family  would be in control and management of the  business.        At  first  sight it may appear paradoxical that  the  income        from  the two businesses at Bombay and Banaras in the  hands        of Nandlal and Girdharlal should be treated as income of the        Hindu  undivided  family and at the same time it  should  be        hold  that  the two businesses were not the affairs  of  the        Hindu undivided family within the meaning of s. 4A(b) of the        Act.   There  is  really no paradox  because  the  place  of        accrual  of  income  of such family and  the  place  of  its        residence  need not necessarily be the same under  the  Act.        Residence  under  s. 4A(b) of a Hindu  undivided  family  is        determined  by  the seat of control and  management  of  its        affairs,  and  in  the matter  of  partnership  business  in        British  India  the Hindu undivided family as  such  had  no        connexion  whatsoever with its control and  management.   If        the  seat  of control is divided, the family may  have  more        than one place of residence; and unless it is wholly outside        the  taxable  territories, the family will be  taken  to  be        resident  in such territories for the purposes of  the  Act.        But  whereas  in  this case in respect  of  the  partnership        business,  the  family as such has nothing to  do  with  its        control and management, we fail to see how the existence  of        such  a partnership will determine residence of  the  family        within the meaning of s. 4A(b),        Therefore,  we  are  of  the opinion  that  the  High  Court        correctly  answered  the question, The appeal fails  and  is        dismissed with costs,        82        630        HlDAYATULLAH, J.-The Commissioner of Incometax, Bombay City,        has  filed this appeal, after obtaining special  leave  from        this Court, against the judgment and order of the High Court        of  Bombay dated February 16, 1955, in a Reference under  s.        66(1)  of the Indian Income-tax Act.  By the judgment  under        appeal,  the High Court (in agreement with the  decision  of        the  Income-tax Appellate Tribunal, Bombay,  given  earlier)        answered in the negative the following question:        " Whether the Hindu undivided family of Gandalal represented        by  Nandlal in the firm of Amulakh Amichand & Co. of  Bombay        was  resident  in  the taxable territories in  the  year  of        account relevant for the assessment year 1945-46.  "        The  facts  briefly  stated are as  follows:  There  was  in        Wadhwan   State  in  Kathiawar  a  Hindu  undivided   family        consisting  of  Gandalal  and  his  four  sons,  Girdharlal,        Hangraj,  Nandlal  and  Ramniklal.  This  family  was  doing        business  in  cloth.   In 1944 Nandlal went  to  Bombay  and        started  on April 25, 1944, a cloth business in  partnership        with  three  strangers,  known as  Amulakh  Amichand  &  Co.        Nandlal’s  s‘are  was  ten  annas, and  that  of  his  three        partners,  six annas.  All the capital of the new  firm  was        supplied  by Nand lal, and for this purpose he received  two        remittances  of  Rs. 50,000 each on April 13 and 27  in  the        year  1944  and  two other remittances  aggregating  to  Rs.        50,000 on June 8 and 29 in the same year.  Thus, a total sum        of   Rs.   1,50,000  was  sent  from  Wadhwan   to   Bombay.        Subsequently,  Girdharlal  also went to  Bombay  and  joined

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      Amulakh  Amichand & Co. and he was given five  annas’  share        out  of  Nandlal’s  share of ten  annas.   In  1946  Amulakh        Amichand  &  Co. started another firm at Banaras  under  the        same  name.   The  partners of the  Banaras  firm  were  the        partners of the firm at Bombay, an outsider from Banaras and        a  third brother of Nandlal.  He did not bring any  capital,        and  presumably  received a share along with his  other  two        brothers.        For  the  assessment  year 1945-46  the  Income-tax  Officer        treated  the Hindu undivided family as resident  in  British        India  under  s.  4A(b) of the  Indian  Incometax  Act,  and        assessed the family after adding the sum of Rs. 1,50,000  to        the income from the firm of        631        Amulakh Amichand & Co., Bombay.  The appeal to the Appellate        Assistant  Commissioner  failed.   On  further  appeal,  the        Appellate  Tribunal, Bombay, held that Nandlal was  still  a        coparcener and not a separated member, because the partition        which was set up by him was not meant to be acted upon.  The        Tribunal, however, held that the decision of the  Income-tax        Officer  and the Appellate Assistant Commissioner  that  the        Hindu undivided family was resident in British India in  the        relevant account year was not sound.  The Appellate Tribunal        therefore,  ordered  that the sum of Rs.  1,50,000  included        under  s. 4(1)(b) (iii) of the Income-tax Act could  not  be        included  and must be deleted.  According to  the  Tribunal,        the  business  at Bombay and later the business  at  Banaras        could  not  be considered to be I the affairs of  the  Hindu        undivided  family  of Gandalal’, so as to bring  the  matter        within  s.  4A(b) of the Act.  The Appellate  Tribunal  held        that these two businesses belonged to ’different  entities’,        namely,  the Bombay and Banaras firms, and that these  firms        could not be said to be " the affairs of the Hindu undivided        family  " but the affairs of Nandlal and his brothers  under        the  law of Partnership.  At the instance of  the  assessee,        the Tribunal referred the above question for the opinion  of        the High Court.        The Bombay High Court referred to the decision of this Court        in V. V. N. M. Subbayya Chettiar v. Commissioner of  Income-        tax,  Madras (1), and pointed out that by the  expression  "        the  affairs of the Hindu undivided family " was  meant  not        the  private  or  domestic affairs of the  family  but  some        affairs,  which  had some reference to the  Income-tax  Act.        The  word  " affairs " must, it was held,  be  construed  in        relation  to taxation.  The learned Judges then referred  to        the position of a coparcener entering into partnership  with        strangers,  and observed that when a coparcener  carried  on        such business in partnership on behalf of the Hindu  family,        " the affair " was of the coparcener and not of the  family,        but  when the business was carried on by the family  itself,        then  it  was " the affair " of the family and  not  of  the        coparcener  or  coparceners.  They pointed out that  in  the        cited  case  Fazl  Ali, J., seemed to have  held  that  even        though a partnership        (1)  [1950] S.C.R. 961.        632        business  might  be an ’activity’ of the  Hindu  family,  it        would not be " the affair " of the Hindu family in the sense        in  which the expression was used in the  Indian  Income-tax        Act.  They, however, held that it did not follow that  every        activity of a coparcener or of a Karta, even if the activity        resulted  in  profit,  became " the affair "  of  the  Hindu        undivided  family.  Thus, treating the business  of  Amulakh        Amichand  &  Co.  as  " the  affair  "  of  the  coparceners        concerned  and not of the Hindu undivided family,  the  High

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      Court  in  agreement  with  the  opinion  of  the  Appellate        Tribunal, answered the question in the negative.        Before dealing with the arguments addressed in the case  and        the  interpretation  of the relevant provision, it  will  be        useful  to  summarise the findings.  It is  found  that  the        Hindu  undivided family did riot disrupt and  partition  the        assets.  Nandlal and Girdharlal continued to be coparceners,        and  the  sum of Rs. 1,50,000 represented the funds  of  the        Hindu  undivided family.  There is no finding  that  besides        the  entering  into partnership by some of  the  coparceners        with  outsiders, there was, in the taxable territories,  any        other  business.  There is also no finding by  the  Tribunal        that no part of the control and management was exercised  in        British India, though the High Court did find this to be so.        We  are  concerned in this case with the application  of  s.        4A(b),   which  deals  with  ’residence’  in   the   taxable        territories,  of  Hindu  undivided  family,  firm  or  other        association  of persons.  Before the present amendment,  the        section read as follows:        4A.        For       the       purposes       of        this        Act- ...........................        (b)a  Hindu undivided family , firm or other association  of        persons is resident in British India unless the control  and        management of its affairs is situated wholly without British        India.        The  words " British India " have now been replaced  by  the        words " taxable territories " ; but the reasoning applicable        to them is the same.  The section was plain in so far as its        intent and purpose was concerned.  It made a Hindu undivided        family  resident  in British India, unless the  control  and        management of its affairs        633        was  situated wholly without British India.  If the  control        and  management  was wholly or partly  situated  in  British        India, then the family was treated as a resident.  The words        " wholly without British India " showed that even if a  part        of  the control and management, be it ever so small a  part,        was exercised in British India, the provision was satisfied.        So  far, there is no dispute, and it is further  clear  that        the  St  affairs " of the Hindu undivided  family  refer  to        something connected with the law of Income-tax.  The section        does  not  refer to the domestic or private affairs  of  the        Hindu undivided family.  It refers to an activity  resulting        in  the  making of income.  Parties are agreed and  I  think        rightly-that   this   aspect  of  the  law  is   clear   and        unambiguous.  It is also settled after the decision of  this        Court  in  Subbayya  Chettiar’s  case  (1).   Parties   are,        however,  at variance, when one comes to the  interpretation        of  the words " its affairs " in the section, and  tries  to        find  the  situs of the control and  management.   In  cases        where the Hindu undivided family itself or through its Karta        controls and manages business in the taxable territories, no        difficulty  arises; but where, as here, the Hindu  undivided        family is represented by one of its coparceners as a partner        in a firm, one faces some difficulties.  Two questions  then        arise, which are:        (a)Is there any " affair" of the Hindu undivided family in        the taxable territories in such circumstances;....and        (b)Is the fact that the coparcener controls and manages   the        partnership,  wholly or partly, sufficient to enable one  to        say that the control and management of the family is located        in the taxable territories ?        Now, it is settled law that a Hindu undivided family  cannot        be  a  partner under the law of Partnership.   Such  of  the        coparceners who join the partnership are regarded quoad  the

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      other  partners,  as  individuals in  their  own  names  and        rights.   Yet,  the  benefits that arise to  them  from  the        partnership  belong to the family, and their rights are  the        asset  of  the family.  We have recently held  in  Charandas        Haridas  V. com-missioner of Income-tax, Bombay (2) that  in        such a situation the matter has to be looked at in the light        of three        (1) [1950] S.C.R. 961.        (2) [196O] 3 S.C.R. 296.        634        separate and independent branches of law.  They are the  law        of  Partnership,  the  Hindu law and  the  law  relating  to        Income-tax.   The  implications of a coparcener  joining  as        partner  with  strangers are different when  one  views  the        matter from the angle of the law of Partnership or from  the        angle of the Hindu law or the law of Income-tax.  In so  far        as the law of Partnership is concerned, the coparcenary  has        no  place in the partnership, and the coparcener-partner  is        everything.   But, viewed from the angle of Hindu  law,  the        position is entirely different.  In this connection, we have        to  bear  in mind two principles of the law  relating  to  a        coparcenary, which are well-settled.  The first is contained        in a well-known passage in the judgment of Lord Westbury  in        Appovier v. Rama Subba Aiyan which reads:        "  According  to the true notion of an undivided  family  in        Hindu  law, no individual member of that family,  whilst  it        remains undivided, can predicate of the joint and  undivided        property,  that  he, that particular member, has  a  certain        definite share... . The proceeds of undivided property  must        be brought, according to the theory of an undivided  family,        to the common chest or purse, and then dealt with  according        to  the  modes of enjoyment by the members of  an  undivided        family."        The second is equally well-known, and is found stated in the        judgment  of Turner, L. J., in Katama Natchiar v.  Rajah  of        Shivaganga (2) in the following words:        "  There  is community of interest and unity  of  possession        between all the members of the family, and upon the death of        any  one  of them the others may well take  by  survivorship        that  in  which they had during the deceased’s  life-time  a        common interest and a common possession."        No  doubt,  there are other principles  also  which  qualify        those quoted, as, for example, the right of a coparcener  to        claim a partition, or, where such usage obtains, to alienate        his  interest,  which give rise to the expression  that  the        coparcener  has a share.  In point of Hindu law, however,  a        coparcener cannot claim        (1) [1866] 11  M.I.A. 75, 89.        (2) [1864] 9 M. I. A. 539, 61 1.        635        any  item of property or even a share of it as his own,  and        his  dealings  with  the  assets are, in so  far  as  he  is        concerned,  for  the  benefit of the  family.   The  law  of        Income-tax makes the sole test for purpose of residence of a        Hindu  undivided family, the existence of an a  affair’  and        its  control  and  management even  partly  in  the  taxable        territories.   For this purpose, one may look at the  actual        facts, and an inference from facts in the light of Hindu law        is equally open.        It  is  thus  plain that whilst in the eye  of  the  law  of        Partnership   the   coparcener  who  is  a   co-partner   is        everything,  in  the eye of Hindu law he is no more  than  a        member  of a body of owners.  In attempting to find  out  if        there is any ’affair’ of the Hindu undivided family, we  can        consider the matter from the point of view of Hindu law.  If

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      this  is the true position of a coparcener in Hindu law,  it        is difficult to accept the view of the High Court and of the        Tribunal that there was no ’affair’ of the family in British        India.   The  High  Court, with  respect,  posed  the  wrong        question when it asked itself, " was Amulakh Amichand & Co.,        an affair of the family ?".  That question is  self-evident,        and the answer is ’no’ from the point of view of the law  of        Partnership.   The  proper question to ask was,  as  I  have        framed  it,  viz.,  "  was there  an  affair  of  the  Hindu        undivided  family  in British India?".  To search  and  find        this ’affair’, it is not necessary to look for it within the        partnership any more than to look for it in the affairs of a        bank  where  the family keeps its money with which  it  does        business.   That  this  was not a  mere  ’activity’  but  an        activity  involving expenditure of family funds  in  British        India  and resulting in the earning of money is admitted  on        all  hands.   The  income  received  from  the   partnership        belonged to the family, as is wellsettled.  See  Mangalchand        Mohanlal, In re (1), Murugappa Chetty & Sons v. Commissioner        of Income-tax (2) and Kaniram Hazarimull v. Commissioner  of        Incometax  (3  ) and the numerous cases  cited  there.   The        affair,  if any, which we have to find, is not to  be  found        within the four corners of the partnership but outside        (1) [1952] 21 I.T.R. 164.     (2) [1952] 21 I.T.R. 311.        (3) [1955] 27 I.T.R. 294.        636        it.  The  partnership was only the result  of  the  business        activity  of the family and evidence of it.  The  affair  we        have  to find must be regulated by Hindu law and not by  the        law  of Partnership, because a partnership is  regulated  by        the two laws considered the other way round.        The  section we have to interpret speaks of the  affairs  of        the  Hindu undivided family whatever shape it may take,  and        the enquiry is thus limited to what is the dictate of  Hindu        law.  It is an error to think that one can ignore a palpable        conclusion  of that law, and go to find the answer from  the        law  of  Partnership.  Nor do I think that the  decision  of        this  Court  in Subbayya Chettiar’s case (1) laid  down  any        contrary  proposition.  There, the karta who  visited  India        for  a  short period dealt with some matters  including  the        starting of certain businesses.  The Hindu undivided  family        was all the time in Ceylon, and it was held that his actions        could be described as ’ activities’.  Indeed, the matter was        not  decided as to whether the " affair’, if there was  one,        was  of the family or of the coparceners, and the case  went        against  the  assessee on the burden of proof which  he  had        failed to discharge, to bring his case within the exception.        If the karta had lived in India or some other coparcener  or        coparceners  had  stayed  on permanently  to  manage  the  ’        affairs’,  then  the question would  have  been  considered,        perhaps, differently.        In  this case, we are not concerned with the  ’affairs’,  of        the firm of Amulakh Amichand & Co., but with the  ’ affairs’        of  the Hindu undivided family.  The coparceners who  became        partners could not say that they were not concerned with the        Hindu  undivided  family  to  which  they  belonged  and  an        undivided  asset of which they owned in common with  others.        Their  investing moneys, becoming partners and  running  the        partnership, starting other partnerships were, from the view        point of the coparcenary according to Hindu law, as much the        affair  of the rest of the family as their own.  In view  of        what  I  have  said, the first of the  two  questions  posed        earlier must be answered in the affirmative, that is to say,        that there was an        (1)  [1950] S.C R. 961.

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      637         ’affair’  of  the  Hindu undivided family  in  the  taxable        territories  (then  British India) in the  circumstances  of        this case.        The  question then is: where was the control and  management        of  the Hindu undivided family located ?  If it  was  wholly        located  without  the  taxable  territories  (then   British        India),  then the family would be nonresident.   The  burden        was on the assessee to establish this, and we were not shown        any  evidence in this behalf.  The question can  be  decided        here  also  on  the burden of proof alone, as  was  done  in        Subbayya  Chettiar’s  case (1).  It need  not,  however,  be        decided  on  that  narrow  issue  for  reasons’  which  will        presently  appear.   Section 4A deals with residence  of  an        individual at one end and of a corporation like the  company        at  the  other.  It also deals with the residence  of  three        entities, viz., Hindu undivided family, firm and association        of persons in the remaining part.  The tests for these three        categories are different.  Special tests have been  provided        for individuals, based on residence for a certain number  of        days.    Two  alternative  tests  have  been  provided   for        companies,  the first being that the control and  management        of their affairs must be situated wholly within the  taxable        territories.   Where the control is without, a  company  can        still be taxed if its income within the taxable  territories        in the year of account (omitting, capital gains) is  greater        than  its income without the taxable territories,  with  the        same omission.  The first provision is necessary, because  a        company  can  have more than one  residence,  its  residence        being where it ’ keeps house and does business’.         The test is reversed for a Hindu undivided family, which is        non-resident only if the whole of its control and management        is  situate without the taxable territories.  The  residence        of the members of the coparcenary is not a relevant  factor,        but  if control and management is exercised by  them  within        the  taxable territory, the family as a whole is treated  as        resident.   In  Subbayya  Chettiar’s case  (1),  this  Court        observed  that  ’  situated’  implies  functioning  somewhat        permanently,  though  the  management  and  control  may  be        exercised        (1)  [1950] S.C.R. 961.        83        638        in  more  than  one place.  To  prove  that  management  and        control  is within the taxable territories,  something  more        than  a  casual ’activity’ is needed.  The same  tests  also        apply to a firm and an association of persons.        The  words ’control and management’ have  been  figuratively        described  as  ’  the head and brain’.  In the  case  of  an        individual, the test is not necessary, because his residence        for  a certain period is enough, it being clear that  within        the  taxable  territories be would necessarily bring  his  ’        head  and  brain’  with him.  The ’ head  and  brain’  of  a        company  is  the  Board of Directors, and if  the  Board  of        Directors exercised complete local control, then the company        is  also  deemed  to be resident.  In  the  case  of  firms,        association  of  persons  and Hindu  undivided  family,  the        control  and management can be exercised by one or  more  of        the  group.   So long as this control and  management  (even        partly)  is found, and it must be so when  some  coparceners        reside  in British India and manage the affair,  the  family        must be treated as resident.        The necessity for the test is thus obvious.  The  Income-tax        law  anticipated that control and management of the  affairs        of  Hindu  undivided  families  (firms  and  association  of

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      persons), might easily be in two or more places, one or more        coparceners  being  within the taxable territories  and  the        other or others, without.  To prevent the escape of tax  and        to get at the income of such families having multiple places        of control and management, it was provided that the whole of        the  control  and  management must be  without  the  taxable        territories   to   avoid  the  implication   of   residence.        Otherwise,   different  coparceners  can  manage   different        businesses in the taxable territories and the family  cannot        be  regarded  as  resident if the karta  lived  outside,  an        anomaly  which does not really arise.  In the present  case,        can  one  say  that the control and  management  was  wholly        without the taxable territories (then, British India,) ?  If        one goes by the case set up by the assessee, one finds  that        the  clam was that there was a partition in the  family  and        that Nandlal came to        639        Bombay  as  a  separated member.  This  claim  involves  the        admission  that  the affairs, such as they  were,  were  not        controlled  from  Wadhwan.   Since,  however,  the  case  of        partition pleaded by the assessee was not accepted, it might        be  held  that the family at Wadhwan was, perhaps,  also  in        control.  But it is equally clear that a part of the control        of  the affairs of the family was done in British  India  by        those  coparceners, who became partners in the business  and        through  whom and not directly from Wadhwan the  partnership        business  at  Bombay was run to the benefit of  the  family.        Those  partners  who -were also coparceners  of  the  family        arranged to start this business at Bombay and stayed on  and        managed  it;  they  started a  fresh  business  at  Banaras,        admitted  a  stranger  as  partner  at  the  new  place  and        presumably supplied capital from the Bombay firm or from the        family’  coffers.   There  is  no claim  at  all  that  they        supplied  their own separate funds.  All these actions  were        acts  of control and management.  They were not  casual  but        permanent in character.  Thus,the control and management  of        family  affairs vis a vis the partnership was being done  by        them.   The coparceners who Januslike face two ways,  cannot        shelter behind the law of Partnership, and claim that  their        action  had  no reference to the ’affairs’  of  the  family,        which  was at their back.  I am not equating the affairs  of        the  partnership  with the affairs of the family.   But  the        entire  business  involved a family undertaking,  and  those        affairs  were being managed in British India.  This  control        and  management  of  the businesses was, in  fact,  and  for        purposes of the law of Income-tax, control and management of        the ’ affairs’ of the Hindu undivided family within  British        India,  and  the  family must,  therefore,  be  regarded  as        resident in the accounting year within British India.        In my judgment, the decision of the Bombay High Court,  with        respect, was erroneous.  The answer to the question ought to        have been in the affirmative.  I would, therefore,  dissolve        the  answer  given by the Bombay High  Court,  and  instead,        would answer the question in the affirmative.  I would  also        order that        640        the  respondent  bear  his own costs and pay  those  of  the        appellant here and throughout.        ORDER OF COURT.        In  accordance with the majority judgment of the Court,  the        appeal is dismissed with costs.        Appeal dismissed.