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Issues:
Taxability of deposits in the firm's account under Income-tax assessment for the year 1944-45. Analysis: The case involved a firm with three partners, including a financing partner, Munna Lal, who had arranged two deposits of Rs. 10,000 and Rs. 15,000 in the firm's account in the names of his wife and father-in-law. The Income-tax authorities treated these deposits as taxable income of the firm for the year in question. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner upheld the decision, but the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal partially accepted the appeal, ruling that only Rs. 10,000 was taxable income. The Tribunal found that Munna Lal, the financing partner, had provided the money, and therefore, the firm was not the owner of the deposits. As a result, the money could not be considered as profits of the firm. The Tribunal accepted that the money belonged to Munna Lal, one of the partners, and not to the firm. Therefore, the amount could not be included in the firm's assessment. The court held that since the money did not belong to the firm, it could not be considered as the firm's income for the assessment year. The court emphasized that once it was established that the money belonged to Munna Lal and not the firm, it was irrelevant to examine the sources from which Munna Lal obtained the money. The court's decision was based on the finding that the money was brought into the firm's accounts by Munna Lal, indicating his ownership of the funds. Consequently, the court ruled that the deposits could not be considered as profits of the firm earned during the relevant accounting year. The court concluded that since the money did not belong to the firm but to Munna Lal individually, it could not be treated as part of the firm's income for the assessment year in question. In conclusion, the court answered the question referred by the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal in the negative, stating that there was no material to establish that the Rs. 15,000 deposit was taxable income of the firm. The court also awarded costs amounting to Rs. 200 to the assessee.
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