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Issues Involved:
1. Taxability of the amount received by the assessee on dissolution of the partnership firm u/s 28(iv) of the Income-tax Act, 1961. Summary: Issue 1: Taxability of the amount received by the assessee on dissolution of the partnership firm u/s 28(iv) of the Income-tax Act, 1961 The Income-tax Appellate Tribunal referred the question to the High Court regarding whether the amount of Rs. 40,000 received by the assessee from the dissolution of the partnership firm Messrs. Security Equipment is exigible to tax as a benefit or perquisite u/s 28(iv) of the Income-tax Act, 1961. The assessee contended that the amount could not be taxed under section 28(iv) as it was not a benefit arising from the business carried on by the firm. The Income-tax Officer included the amount in the assessable income, but the Appellate Assistant Commissioner and the Tribunal deleted this addition, leading to the Revenue's appeal. The High Court considered several precedents, including the Supreme Court's decision in CIT v. Bankey Lal Vaidya, which held that the distribution of assets on the dissolution of a firm does not constitute a sale or transfer and thus cannot be taxed as capital gains. Similarly, in Malabar Fisheries Co. v. CIT, the Supreme Court ruled that the distribution of assets upon dissolution does not amount to a transfer, and hence, the development rebate could not be withdrawn. The High Court also reviewed CIT v. Gangadhar Baijnath, where compensation received for surrendering partnership rights was considered business income. However, the facts of the present case differed significantly, as the amount received by the assessee was not for the termination of a contract but as a share in the dissolved firm's assets. The High Court concluded that the amount received by the assessee did not represent the value of any benefit or perquisite arising from the business of the firm and thus could not be taxed u/s 28(iv). The question was answered in the negative, in favor of the assessee and against the Revenue, with no order as to costs.
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