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2001 (6) TMI 41 - HC - Income Tax

Issues Involved:
The judgment involves the following issues:
1. Whether the wife of the assessee is a benamidar of the assessee.
2. Whether the income from the property standing in the name of the assessee's wife should be included in the total income of the assessee.

Issue 1: Wife as Benamidar
The assessee, an individual, filed a return for the assessment year 1981-82 showing a total income. The Income-tax Officer found that the assessee's wife purchased a flat for Rs.79,850, occupied by the assessee, with no independent income source. The investment was traced back to the assessee, including an interest-free loan and proceeds from previous transactions. The Tribunal held that the wife was not a benamidar, as the flat was in her name and no evidence proved otherwise. The High Court noted that the entire investment was by the assessee, and based on precedents, ruled that the income from the property should be taxed in the hands of the real owner, the assessee.

Issue 2: Taxation of Property Income
The Assessing Officer considered the flat occupied by the assessee as the property of the assessee, leading to the inclusion of income derived from the flat in the assessee's total income. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner and the Tribunal upheld this view, emphasizing that the flat was registered in the wife's name and no evidence suggested she was a benamidar. The High Court referred to a precedent where ownership for income tax purposes was based on entitlement to receive income, concluding that since the investment was solely by the assessee, the income from the property should be taxed in the assessee's hands. Consequently, both questions were answered in favor of the Revenue and against the assessee.

This judgment clarifies the taxation implications when property is registered in the name of a spouse without their actual investment, affirming that income should be attributed to the real investor, as per income tax principles.

 

 

 

 

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