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Issues:
1. Taxation of rental income transferred to spouse without consideration. 2. Taxation of interest income from savings made by spouse from rental income. Analysis: 1. The judgment addressed the issue of taxation of rental income transferred by the assessee to his wife without consideration. The Income-tax Act, 1961, specifically under section 64(1)(iv), states that income arising directly or indirectly to the spouse from assets transferred without adequate consideration is taxable in the hands of the transferor. The court clarified that the section only applies to income from the transferred asset and does not nullify the transfer itself. Therefore, the rental income from the flat transferred to the wife was rightly taxed in the hands of the assessee. 2. The second issue involved the taxation of interest income derived from the savings made by the wife from the rental income. The court emphasized that section 64 is limited to income directly or indirectly received from the transferred asset and does not extend to income from savings made from the transferred assets. The interest income from the fixed deposit made by the wife, using the saved rental income, was not deemed to be the income of the assessee. The court distinguished this case from precedent where the Supreme Court held that when a property was sold and the proceeds deposited, the interest would be taxable in the transferor's hands. 3. The court also considered the Revenue's argument citing a Supreme Court case involving a cash gift used to acquire a property, where the capital gain was taxed in the parent's hands. However, the court differentiated the present case, highlighting that the interest income derived by the wife was not directly linked to the flat transferred by the assessee. Additionally, a previous decision by the court was referenced, emphasizing that the income derived must be from the transferred asset itself to fall under section 64. 4. Ultimately, the court concluded that the Tribunal was correct in deleting the wife's interest income from the assessee's taxable income. The judgment reiterated that section 64 is a special provision and should only be applied to income directly or indirectly realized from the transferred assets or their substitutes. The court awarded costs to the assessee and clarified that the tax implication, in this case, did not warrant a reference initiated by the Revenue.
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