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1985 (2) TMI 25 - HC - Income Tax

Issues Involved:
1. Determination of whether the amounts paid to Mrs. K.C. Bose constituted a diversion of income by an overriding title.
2. Classification of the payments as either capital or revenue expenditure.

Summary of Judgment:

Issue 1: Diversion of Income by Overriding Title
The primary question was whether the amounts paid to Mrs. K.C. Bose constituted a diversion of income of the assessee at source by an overriding title and were allowable as a deduction from the total income of the assessee. The Tribunal initially found that the assessee had purchased the share of late K.C. Bose in the goodwill of the firm at a definite price of Rs. 50,000, thereby acquiring a capital asset. It was held that the amount represented a capital expenditure even though it was to be paid in instalments over a period.

The assessee's advocate contended that the payments were a diversion of income by an overriding title and obligation created by a charge on the assets of the partnership. The Revenue's advocate argued that no charge had been created by the deed dated May 22, 1965, and that the payments were capital expenditure for the purchase of goodwill.

The court reviewed several precedents, including:
- Raja Bejoy Singh Dudhuria v. CIT [1933] 1 ITR 135 (PC): Held that income diverted by an overriding charge before it reaches the assessee is not taxable in his hands.
- CIT v. Sitaldas Tirathdas [1961] 41 ITR 367 (SC): Distinguished between diversion of income by overriding title and application of income after it reaches the assessee.

The court concluded that the charge created in the subsequent partnership deed was voluntary and for fulfilling a personal obligation of the surviving partners. It did not create an overriding charge that diverted income at source. Therefore, the income of the subsequent partnership was not diverted by an overriding title.

Issue 2: Capital or Revenue Expenditure
The Tribunal held that the payments to Mrs. K.C. Bose were capital expenditure as they were for the acquisition of a capital asset (goodwill) and were to be paid in instalments. The court agreed with this assessment, noting that the transaction was a disposition of property after death, akin to a conditional bequest, and not a sale simpliciter.

The court emphasized that the obligation to pay Mrs. K.C. Bose was a personal obligation of the surviving partners, and the charge created in the subsequent partnership deed was for a limited purpose. The income of the partnership was not diverted by an overriding title.

Conclusion:
The court answered the referred question in the negative and in favor of the Revenue, indicating that the payments to Mrs. K.C. Bose did not constitute a diversion of income by an overriding title and were not allowable as a deduction from the total income of the assessee. There was no order as to costs.

 

 

 

 

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